Morning chronicle and commercial and shipping gazette, 25 juillet 1882, mardi 25 juillet 1882
[" COMMERCIAL AND SHIPPING GAZETTE.VOL.XXXVI.AFTERNOON DESPATCHES LSTEST FROM EUROPE.Railway Collision\u2014The Chinese Labor Question, etc.Three Hundred Houses Burned in Russia.PROPOSED VOLUNTEER REVIEW MONTREAL.AT A STEAMER SUNK WITH -W PEOPLE ABOARD.Robbery\u2014Narrow Escape from Drowning\u2014Personal.DISASTROUS FIRES\u2014DEATH RAIL, ETC.ON THE THE CONTRACT FOR THE QUEBEC HARBOR IMPROVEMENTS.* FOREIGN.Homo Kok«, July 24\u2014There is great activity among the Chinese coolie agents.Several steamers have been hastily filled in order to reach America before the 4th of August.AMERICAN.New York, July 24\u2014The Chinese Minister returned yesterday from a visit to the fTifnrut legations in London, Paris and mSBL Cincinnati, July 24\u2014The express train oa the Little Miami road, collided with a freight train near Foster's crossing yesterday, I p^pje ^ homeless, and was badly wrecked.Macaleb, Ju,|ge it js reported the Advocate O'suerai of Louisiana ; J.W.Cocks- |Kaw» has been sunk 1 GREAT BRITAIN.Londov, July 24\u2014It is understood Ear1 Kimberly, Colonial Secretary, has accepted the Chancellorship of the Duchy of Lancaster, resigned by Mr.Bright.ITALY.Rome, July24\u2014G.P.Marsh, American Minister, died suddenly at \\ allambrosa to-day, The Italian Government expressed deep sympathy with the widow and telegraphed to Washington an expression of the sympathy of the Italian nation.AUSTRIA.Viekna, July 24.\u2014It is reported three hundred houses and Urge warehouses have been bnmed at Radsewilow, Russia.3,000 SPïCIit FROM ST.JOHN, B.B.St.John*, N.B., July 24\u2014A terrible thunder storm passed over tho city this afternoon ; the lightning was the sharpest that has been observed here -for a very long time, the rain descended in torrents and some of the thunder claps were terrific.Many horses ran away.Nearly all the stores had to he lighted by gas.The weather during the forenoon and early part of the afternoon was beautifully fine.Several persons were affected by the lightning, but none seriously.SPECIAL FROM OTTAWA.inest was held Advocate!__ bedfp, of New York ; and three others were tligatiy injured.CANADIAN.Mostrkal, July 22\u2014Charles Bouaciua.Clerk of the Circuit Court here, was hustled and robbed of $303 on the steps of the Bank q( Montreal, on Saturday, by three Western tate* ; the crier of the Court was with so quickly was it done that he had no time to render assistance or stop the James Glenn y, James O\u2019Brien and W.Gilmour, all in the employ of William Ropery, St.Gabriel Village, bad a narrow escape from drowning on Saturday night.As they passed under the Victoria bridge their yacht capsized through improper handling, and all would have been drowned had not the tog \u2022\u2018St.Peter\" been near at the time.The Herald building, recently damaged by the headquarters of the Reform party since 1865, is to be sold.The paper has ; secured the old St.James Hotel premise^ A grand volunteer review is proposed here during September.The stock market was much stronger than Saturday.A fall is expected before the close ef tha month.Ottawa* July 24\u2014Mr.Ask with to-day declined to accept the contract for the Quebec harbor improvements, having been disap-the necessary plant.The Russian steamer \u201cMos-by a boiler explosion, with two hundred hands.UNITED STATES.North Adams, Mass., July 24.\u2014R.G.Walden, ex select man.Chief of the Fire Department, Deputy Sheriff, Town Collector and Treasurer of the Hoosac V alley Agricultural Society, was this morning sentenced for incendiarism to four years\u2019 prison.Grand Rapids, Mich., July 24.\u2014Six million feet of lumber, owned by the Michigan Barrel Company and six dwellings, were burned to-day.Several others were damaged.Loss $100,000, Prcsno, Cala., July 24\u2014Fifty houses were burned here last night, including the Ogle House, the French Hotel, the Star Hotel, Fanner\u2019s Hotel, the Mechanics House, Hugnes\u2019Livery Stables, the Farmer\u2019s Bank, the Metropolitan Hall, stores, shops, saloons, etc.The loss is probably $2,000,000, much of it uninsured.Minneapolis, July 24.\u2014This evening an incendiary fire broke ont in the lumber yards of the Minneapolis Mill Company and is still burning.Three million feet of lumber have been burned.Loss, $60,0C0.Meridian, Mass., July 24\u2014On Saturday night five intoxicated negro railroad laborers left Meridian for home, walking on the Mobile and Ohio Railway.They fell asleep near the town, when a freight train ran over pointed in getting the necessary plan*.Ahf them, killing one, faully wounding one and ! seriouaW wounding three.This morning Goiknolly, about $150,000 or $8,000 in excess of Askwith : that of Moore and Wright is the next in order, $218,000.Another Cabinet Council is being held to- The return of Mr.F.W.Ldggatt, a member of a prominent dry goods firm, is the topic of conversation.He had been missing for several weeks after having returned from a visit to relatives in England.He says an unexpected and severe illness delayed his return to the Capital.\t* .\t, t A boy named Wallace met bis death on Sstnrday afternoon in Mr.McKay\u2019s bush whilst batter-nutting.Several boys accompanied the unfortunate lad, but were unable to tell who he was or where be came from.AN«w Edinburgh citizen solved the mystery.Toronto, July 24\u2014An inquest was opened morning at Park dale, on the body of the boy Young, who was shot and killed yesterday by County Constable Albert.The «ty papers to-day have loud words of psaiae to the workingman for the large and reepectable parade of Saturday.The supply of farm laborers here is not ban equal to the demand.Haijtax, July 24\u2014A young Frenchman Rcmi Leblanc was drowned on Friday at Tuaket Islands, Y\u2019armouth County, by the upsetting of a.dory, But little progress is yet made in the formation of a new Local Government.Mr.Gay-ton who had been sent for by the Lieutenant-Governor arrived in town on Saturday night, and left Mu* morning for Truro to meet His Honor.A meeting of the newly elected will then probably be called by Mr.Gayton.IV south of Desota, the mangled remains of six negroes were found on the track.They were employed on the New Orleans and North-Eastern Railroad.They had just been paid.A negro has been arrested and another is being hunted up, on strong suspicion of having murdered and robbed them, and placed the bodies on the track.WEST INDIES.Santa Domingo, July 20\u2014General Ulysses Henreaux has been elected President by ai overwhelming majority.IMPERIAL PARLIAMENT.Ottawa, July 24\u2014An roq to-day on the remains of Hugh Diamond, who was accidentally killed in Gilmonr\u2019s lumberyard, on the Gatineau, to-day.Deceased attempted to place his handspike between the lumber at the end of the car, and in doing so over-balanced himself, falling beneath it.The first car passing over his hotly and crushing his ribs in a fearful manner ; the second car was thrown off the track and the two hind wheels of the third passed over forehead.A verdict of \u201caccidental eath\" was returned.Mr.Joseph Lefcoile, of the Interior Department, has been elected a member of the Scfeoce Congress that meets at Montreal on the 22nd prox.The subject he will bring before the Congress will be a ''Study of the Different Atmosphères, Sea and Wind Currents, Electricity and Gages, with a view to practical Ballooning.\" The United States Congress has conceded the Ottawa, Waddington and New York Railway and Bridge Company the right to construct a bridge over the St.Lawrence.SPECIAL FROM T0R0MT0.Toronto, July 24\u2014The stock market today was fairly active and strong, prices of banks advancing one-half to one per cent.Since yesterday 21 cars of cheese for Montreal, 38 cars of beef for Boston, and 25 of hogs for East Cambridge, went East by the Grand Trunk Railway.This afternoon Detectives Reid and Brown proceeded down the Kingston road in search of the parties who are supposed to be the principals who kicked VV illiam Long to death, and after a wearisome search they tracked Hugh Kelly, who lives on McGee street, to a butcher\u2019s shop, where he was in hiding.When Reid attempted to take him Kelly jumped to one side and catching up a batcher\u2019s knife made a vigorous plunge at the officer.The latter, however, quickly disarmed and brought him to the central police station.A despatch from Stouffville later on states that a third man, Ferguson, also supposed to be a principal in the kicking, was arrested this morning in that village by a county constable.The inquest on the body of Andrew Young, junior, shot at High Park by constable John Albert, last Sunday, was held at Farkdale.The evidence showed clearly that Albert had fired the fatal shot, and also that there waa no justification for the act, the only doubt being on the question of an intention to shoot ; Young and others were in a boat in a portion of the Grenadier pond, over which a Mr.Kllis claims au exclusive right and refused to leave, whereupon Ellis asked Albert to arrest them, and it was in arresting Young that he was shot.1 he Jury brought in a verdict of Wilful murder.\u201d Threats of lynching in case any other verdict was brought in were freely made.Albert showed little emotion, but his wife seemed in great distress, HOUSE OF COMMONS.London, July 24\u2014In the House of Commons to-day.Lord Hartington announced that at the earliest opportunity he will move that the Honse consents to the application of the Indian revenues to defray the cost of the expedition from India to Egypt.Mr.Gladstone moved a vote of credit for strengthening the force* in Egypt.He proposed that three pence be added to the income tax for the Utter half of the year.Mr.Gladstone stated that the expedition would consist of 2,400 cavalry, 13,400 infantry, 1,700 artillery and 3,700 of garrison artillery.A Commissariat reserve of 3,100 men would sail later.He described the state of Egypt, the lawlessness of the military and riot and violence of the people.He said the recent conduct of the Egyptian military waa opposed to the first impulse of there was not the smallest shred OriNIOSS OF THE PEOPLE.leader (To the Editor of the Momiruj Chronicle.) I^ .apport the contention that Sir.\u2014Yesterday evening (Sabbath) on the military party was the popular party, reaching the Terrace in your city, I was sur- Government bad no desire to nterfere praed to aee the amusement of \u201chobby with intimate authority.The Go-ermnent bores\u201d riding being indulged in, accompanied ha(j obtained the moral assent of Europe to & discordant note of a hand organ.1 tbe policy they were pursuing, this allowed 1 by the discordant osnainly did not expect to see iu a British possession, and may say, after being âa various Britiah colonies, that this is the nrst instance of such a breach of Sabbath desecration I have seen.Yours, Ac., D.Bailey.Quebec, 24th July, 1882.Important Decision* LIABILITY OF MEMBERS OF MUTUAL INSURANCE COMPANIES.S\u2019Recently the Hon Mr.Justice Mathieu rendered a very important decision concern-inft the right of Mutual Insurance Companies lo claim contributions.,\"\u2018m th* insured.Formerly i held, in fact it was not wm sufficient for the Company to fyle a copy of the resolution of the Board of Directors in order to establish the right of the Company to levy assessments, in two cases of the Joliette Mutual Insurance Company against Mr.Robidoux, of Fam ham, and Mrs.A.Dupraa, of Hochelaga, the question was raised oy tho defence, toat it was incumbent on tÉts^Oanmany to prove that losses twa been sustain «Lfw which thedefendant washable, and *Rs.t he bad been assessed for his fair proportion of the losses only, ^he defence has Seen maintained by the hon.jv Jgewho explain-' ad th** the Company had been placed into voluntary liquidation in February, 1881, and policies had been cancelled by the Dicectoni on the 28th February, 1681.On \u201ctoe 6th April following, the Directors and liquidators made a first assessment of $24,-000, and a second one in December last for foy rmn, which included the balance of all prsmixun notes yet existing.These suits were brought for the balance of the defendants\u2019\tnotes.The defendants plead- ed that these assessments were unnecessary and on justified ; that there ex is tea no claims the Company for losses for which they ware liable ; that the Company was in the hands of speculators who considered it their own property, and who have bought the assets of the Company and believe themselves entitled to recover them in full.From the proof made, it appeared that the liquidators sold the balance of the assessments, coining to $29,000, for $3,300 to a certain party who is the partner of Mr^J.J.Webster, the Secretary of the Company, and its only witness.It was under this transfer that saits were taken right and left in the of the Company.Now, apart from the proof made* can ue Company recover, on the fyiing of a copy of the resolution of Directors, without proving the existence of the losses, tee proportion due by the defendants ?fck*.! Hw Honor.He thought not.Mntual insurance companies are peculiar.The in-taxed are also insurers ; they expect no profit, but agree to pay a share of certain leases, namely, those that may happen while their Uat.They are aaaesaaMe for certain specified losses only, which must be proved to exist.No evidence of this nature had been made here by the plaintiff, and the two suits were therefore dismissed with costa.Messrs.\u20227 Pagnuelo and St.Jean were counsel for the defendants ; Mr.Maclaren, in one case, and Mr.Wotherspoon, in the other, for the plaintiff.\u2014Star.HOUSE OF LORDS.In the House of Lords, Earl Granville stated that Government was entirely without information as to whether the Sultan intended to send troops to Egypt.The Government thought that in the present state of Egypt force must be employed ; 15,000 troops would be sent there.France and England hoped for the co-operation of Italy in measures for the protection of the Suez Onal.The French Government has not yet stated whether it would assist in the advance into the interior of Egypt.The feeling of Europe, however, was m.favor of England\u2019s action.\tBMMMBMHHH Earl Salisbury said it was the duty of all m ~ f\tj» ov stages policy as fostering an _______ ^\t^ Mohammedans that the Christian powers are united in a crusade against them of the Government\u2019s impression among the his Good and Bad Claret.London Truth.The Times has recently published several articles designed to show that the claret now sold in England is a noxious and deleterious mixture, and that the public, therefore, should take to Italian, Australian and Greek wines.All this is nonsense, as the writer of the articles might have known bad he studied subject.T he prime cost, of the cheapest 9 Modoc wipe is £8 10k.per hogshead, or ut 8s.per dozen ; the auty is 2s.per dozen * and if 3s, per dozen be added for bottles* corking, etc., it will be seen that the prime cost is 13s.to the importer.At present the importers are also the retail venders, and allowing a profit of 2s.per dozen, it will be perceived that the price to the consumer would be 15s.per dozen.How, then, can the Times make out its assertion that no good claret can be bought here even at 30s.per dozen bottles ?At Bordeaux, the produce of the district .ia-.divided into seven Each class has its price ; \u2019^he second SPECIAL FROM MONTREAL.Montreal, July 24.\u2014Alexander Roland, aged 24, employee to Messrs.Linton & Co nhoe manufacturera, while placing a new strap on the shaft pulley, on Saturday, w; struck by ao exploded wheel and dangerously wounded in the shoulder.College students on vacation have aroused the Corpoiation by placing upon prominent impediments to public locomotion a well-printed notice that \u201cthese ruins are kept by order of the City Council for purposes of research by the American Science Association on their visit to Montreal in August next.\u201d Public baths are to be placed on the La-chine Canal for the working classes.Madame Lamarche hre Therrin, murderously assaulted by her husband, lies in a very precarious condition.He is still at large.Joseph Hurtubise was found drunk in a carriage on Saturday at midnight, and taken in charge by a policeman, who mistook him for a carter.To-day he waa recognized as one of three men who hired Philias Ouellette, a carter, to drive them to town and then beat him and left him insensible on the road.Hurtubise was fined 814.The Atlantic and North-Western Railway have acquired the right of way between Caughnawaga and Lachine, for the building of a bridge.\t' The Canada Atlantic Railway Company has nearly completed their bridge over the Rideau, near Ottawa, and in a few days ^rill complete the line between Ottawa and Coteau.The section between Rouse\u2019s Point and Valley-field will be shortly commenced, and then the St.Lawrence will be spanned by a magnificent bridge nearly three miles long, for which purpose the islands have been purchased at Cotefcu.Uoiil the bridge U completed a ferry will be used.John Lesperanee, member of the Royal Canadian Society, has been appointed Immigrant Agent for this Province, rire B.Ibbotson, deceased.Mr.Les pe ranee was for many years ou the staff of the Montreal Gazette and latterly on the Canadian Illustrated News.The beautiful steam yacht \u201cSiesta,\u2019' fitted up with every improvement, has been sold to Mr.Gendron, distiller, of Toronto, for $26,-000.She was built at Providence, R.I.Three hundred unlicensed dogs have been hang the past week and their bodies handed over to the city scavenger for conversion into manure.uite a number of thieves are in town.QUEBEC.TUESDAY.JULY SPORTING NEWS THE TURF.London, July 24.\u2014Lorillard\u2019s \u201cAransu\u201d and \u201cGerald\u201d have been scratched from all engagements in the Goodwood meeting, which commences off to-murrow.PUGILISTIC.New York, July 24.\u2014Another sparring match has been arranged for August 1st, between Sullivan and Wilson ; Sullivan gives Wilson $1,000 and half the gate money if he does not knock him out in four three-minute rounds.AQUATICS.Toronto, July 24.\u2014Hanlan positively re-fuses to row any races this year.On Saturday, a 45-mile yacht race between seven of the fastest yachts on Lake Ontario, for a sweepstakes of $20 per yacht, was won by the new 30-ton cutter \u201cAileen,\u201d which beat the rest of the fleet several miles.The 10-ton imported Scotch cutter was second, beating the schooner \u201cOriole\u201d by five minâtes on time allowance, although the \u201cOriole\u201d got in ahead of her.The sloop \u201cMadcap\u201d was third, five minutes behind the '\u2018Verve.\u201d '1 he result of the race has created a strong feeling in favor of deep draught boats instead of the centre-board sloops, which have been popular for years.London, July 24\u2014The Hillsdale crew has challenged the Thames Rowing Club to an international race between Putney and Mort-lake, on the Thames, suggesting the 4th of August as the day.irishTroubles London, July 24\u2014The Time* says ï\u2014The license the American Criminal law allows to dynamite projects is a scandal and shams to American legislation.A more enormous scandal is the attitude public opinion in America assumes toward them.Never was there a body of National opinion sô inqhisitive and keen which could have shown itself more feeble and inert in the defense of public morality than opinion in America since the Dynamite School became notorious.Parnell and other Home Rule Members of Parliament have formed a committee to organize* public movement in Ireland with a view of counteracting the operations of the Land Corporation.Davitt has consented to co-operate in the scheme, which will bo discussed in the forthcoming conference of Land Leaguers in Paris.Deokertown, N.J., July 24\u2014A large crowd to-day viewed the remains of Fanny PameU.Members of the Land League or gauizations of New York and Philadelphia were present.The Horal offerings were very fine.Rev.N.Pettel read the burial service of the Episcopal Church.The body was then taken to Trenton and placed in the receiving vault of River View Cemetry.Dublin, July 24\u2014Mr.Dillon, M.P., speaking at Mallow, said if sixty honest members were returned to Parliament to support Parnell they would render the Repression Bill inoperative.For every man arrested under the bill they would waste two days in the House of Commons ; when they were enabled to understand the working of the Land Corporation they would organize machinery to defeat it, Tralee, Ireland, July 24\u2014The Flaherty brothers, of London, Ont., Canada, arrested on suspicion of implication in the Phamix Park tragedy, have been released.London, July 24\u2014It is stated John Par nell has applied to the Orangemen to reap his crops.They complied with the request.The Land League agent who appeared was ordered off the premises.1882.No.13198 \u2022\u2018Hr- GRAND THUNK RAILWAY.SUMMER ARRANGEMENTS, COMMENCING Monday, July 24th, 1882.GOING WEST.7.15 A.M.\u2014Mixed Train for Richmord, Montreal, Sherbrooke, Island Pond, and all Lofpl Stations.1.20 P.M.\u2014Day ExpreM for Montreal, Sherbrooke, Island Pond, &c.8.35 P.M.\u2014Night Express for Sherbrooke, Island Pond, Gorham, Lewiston, Portland, Montreal, and points East, West, Soutb-Weat and North-West.GOING EAST.Leaving Montreal.10.00\tP.M.Arriving at Point Levi.C 50 A.M- Leaving Montreal.7.30\tA.M, Arriving at Point Levi.1.20\tP.M.Mixed leaves Richmond.12.45\tP.M.Arriving at Point Levi.7.00\tP.M.JOSEPH HICKSON, General Manager.Montreal, J une 1st, 1882.July 24, 1882.ntcrcolonial Railway.1882 Summer Arrangement.1882 N AND AFTER MONDAY.THE 3rd 1 July, tho Trains wil.run daily, (Sunday excepted) as follows ;\u2014 Will Leave Point Levis* 0 Talk About Plots and Dynamite.NORTH SHORE Railway.COMMENCING ON THURSDAY, June 1st, 1882.Trains will run as follows:\u2014 1\tJltMl**'\t\t\t\t \t\t\t\t I\tMixed.\tMail\tExprès»\tLight g \u2018 Express Leave Ho-\t\t\t\t chelagafor Quebec.\t6.10 pm\t3.00 pm\t10.00 pm\t9.30 AM Arrive at\t\t\t\t Quebec.\t8.00 am\t9.30 \u201c\t6.30 \u201c\t2.40 PM L v Que for Ho-\t\t\t\t chelaga.Arrive at\t5.30 pm\t10.10 AM\t10.00 pm\t14.00 PM Hochelaga Leave Hochelaga for Joliette.\t8.15\tam 5.15\tpm\t4.40 PM\t6.30 am\t9.10 \u201c \t\t\t\t Arrive at Joliette.\t\t\t\t \t7.40 \u201c\t\t\t Leave J o-\t\t\t\t liette for Hochelaga Arrive at\t6.00 am\t\t\t\u2022eeeeeee\t\t Hochelaga\t8.50 \u201c\t\teeeeeeee\t An American Correspondent\u2019» Statements \u2014A Plot to Steal the Princess Louise In the New York correspondence of the London Times appear some strange state mente.The correspondent says :\u2014\u201c The dynamite movement in its present phase began nearly two years ago in active operations, though contemplated and practically sketched out earlier.While the nead-quar ters are at this city, men are engaged m for warding it in every principal city in the United States, though outside New York their chief abiding place is Chicago.I asked the object of these operations, and was told that the conspirators had little definite object excepting to harass England at every vulnerable point.\u201d After speaking at length of their modus operandi and several other plots, the writer says : \u201cA plan was laid in the West to capture the Princess Louise, who was expected to come out and accompany the Marquis of Lome on his recent tour to Manitoba.The conspirators formed the project of swooping down upon her and capturing her for a hostage to be held until the Irish, suspects were released.But the Princess did not then come out to Canada, and the plot failed, they said, because the detectives had wormed it out, sent over a warning, and she prudently remained io England.The leaders quietly organized a party In New York, who were to go to the British Provinces and blow up an English war vessel.These fellows went to Canada, visited Montreal, Quebec and Halifax, and finally went to St.John, New Brunswick.At Halifax there were war vessels, but none of them were in position to lie vulnerable, and no one could be got to undertake the task.I John they discovered an old sloop < I charge of a watchman, and it was determineU to blow this up.They went back to New York to get the materials, discovered in a few days from some developments at St.John that the plot had leaked out.and this, too, was abandoned.\u201d It is supposed to have been the GanaHian training ship that was menaced.Railway Quebec Time.\tTims.EXPRESS forHali-fax and St.John.7.30 A.M.7.15A.M.CCOMMODATION and MAIL.11.15 \u201c 1100 \u201c FREIGHT.7.30 P.M.7.15 PM.Will Arrive at Point Levis.Railway Quebec Time.\tTime.EXPRESS from Halifax and St.John.8.50P.M.8.35P.M.ACCOMMODATION and MAIL.1.10 \u201c 12.55 \u201c FREIGHT.6.15 A.M.6.00 A.M.The Trains to Halifax and St.John run tnrough to their destination on Sunday, while those from Halifax and St, John remain in Camphellton.The Pullman Car leaving Point Levis on Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday runs through to Halifax, and the one leaving on Monday, Wednesday and Friday to St, John.D.POTTÏNGER, Chief Superintendent.Railway Office, Monoton, N.B., } 27th Juno, 1882.\t/ June 30, 1882,\t________ ISLAND OF ORLEAHS FERRY.STEINER \u201cURLEIN8 & ST, JOSEPH\u201d Leaves the Island.4.00 A.M.8.00 A.M.2 30 P.M.6.00 P.M.Leaves Quebec.5.30 A.M.11.30 A.M.4.S0 P.M.7.00 P.M.The Steamer stops at the Government Wharf at St.Joseph of Levis at each trip.For further information apply to CHARLES GUERARD, Agent.June 26,1882.\tAm KLAHD OF ORLEAHS FERRT ALLAN LINE.Undercontract with the Governments of Canad and Newfoundland for tbs conveyance of the CANADIAN and UNITED .STATES MAILS.1882 Summer Arrangements.1882 rHIS COMPANY\u2019S LINES ARE COM posed of the following Double-engined Clyde-built, Iron Steamships.They are built in water-tight compartments, are unsurpassed for strength speed and comfort, are fitted np with al the modem improvements that practical experience can suggest, and have made the fastest time on record.Vessels\tTonnage.Commanders.NUMIDIAN.6100 [Buildinv.] PARISIAN.5400 Cept James Wylie.SARDINIAN.4650 Capt J K Dutton, POLYNESIAN.4100 CaptR Brown.SÀRMATIAN.3600 Capt J Graham.CIRCASSIAN.4000 Lt Smith.R N R.MORAVIAN.3650 Lt Aréher, R N R.PERUVIAN.8400 Capt J Ritchie | NOVA SCOTIAN.8300 Capt Richardson.HIBERNIAN.3440 Capt Hugh Wylie.CASPIAN.3200 Lt Tbomson, KNR.AUSTRIAN.2700 Lt R Barrett,RNK NESTORIAN.2700 Capt D J James.PRUSSIAN.8000 Capt A McDougall SCANDINAVIAN.3000 Capt John Parks.HANOVERIAN.4000 Capt J G Stephen.BUENOS A YREAN.3800 Capt J Scott.COREAN.4000\tCapt Barday.GRECIAN.3600\tCapt CKLeGailai*.MANITOBAN.8150 Dipt MacnicoL CANADIAN.2600 Capt C J Menzisa.PHOENICIAN.2800 Capt John Brown.WALDENS IAN.2600 Capt R P Moore, LUCERNE.2200\tCapt J\u2018 hn Kerr.NEWFOUN DLAND1500 Capt Mylios.ACADIAN.I860\tCapt F McGrath, The shortest sea ute between Amerlc.and Europe, being only five days between land to land.THE STEAMERS OF THE: LIVERPOOL, LONDONDERRY and QUEBEC MAIL SERVICE, Sailing from LIVERPOOL every THURSDAY, and from QUEBEC every SATUR DAY, (calling at Lough Fovle to receive on board and land Mails and Passengers to and from Ireland and Scotland) «re ntendedlto be despatched FROM QUEBEC HIBERNIAN.Saturday, Tut July.CIRCASSIAN.PERUVIAN,.PARISIAN.8AKMATIAN .POLYNESIAN.SARDINIAN.8th 15th \u201c 22nd \u201c 29th \u201c 5tb Aug.12th \u201c Trains leave Mile-End Station Ten Minuta Later than Hoohelaga.^Magnificent Palace Care on all Passenger Day Trains and Sleeping Cars on Night Trains Sunday Trains leave Montreal and Quebec at 4 p.m.AÜ Trains run by Montreal Time.Sure connections with the Canadian Pacific Railway to and from Ottawa.Gkkkral Orncnm.\u201413 PLACE D\u2019ARMES TICKET OFFICES: Oppoarrx St Louis Hotxl, QUEBEC.l Cahadian|Paciftc R\u2019t, OTTAWA.:L.A.SENEGAL, .\tGenT Supt, June 5, 1882.STEAMKR \u201cORLEANS,\u201d CAPTAIN BOLDUC, ON AND AFTER SATURDAY, 24th June, will sail as follows, until further notice, weather and circumstances permitting :\u2014 From Island.\tFrom\tQukbkj.4.30 AM.\t5.15 A.M, 8 00 A.M.\t9 00 A.M.10.00 A.M\tH 30 A M.1.30 P.M\t2.30\tP.M.3 30 P.M.\t4 45 P M.5.45 P.M.\t6.45\tP.M.SUNDAYS.From Island.\tFrom Qukbrc, 11.30 A.M.\t.1.45 P.M.\u2018\t3.00 P M.\t4 00 P.M.5.30 P.M.\t6.30\tP.M.7.30 P.M.'HOLIDAYS.\u201e .,, 8 00 A.M.\t11.30\tAM.1.00 P.M.\t1.45\tP.M.3.00 P.M.\t4.00\tP.M.5.80 P.M.\t6 30 P.M.UT Calling at St.Joseph up and down ¦» Every Wedresday Evening a SPECIAL TRIP from Inland at 10 o\u2019clock.June 24, 1882\tmv2-p DOMINION LINE OF STEAMSHIPS Running in co-< Brand Trunk Ba Tons.ONTARIO.4,157 MISSISSIPPI.2,6»0 TEUTONIA.2,700 8T.LOUIS.2,000 DOMINION.3,176 TEXAS.2,700 OREGON (building).4,856 DATES OF SAILING Dominion.Rien with they *aj if Canada Ton QUEBEC.2,70 BROOKLYN.,3,60 MONTREAL.8,28 TORONTO.i.4,28 8ARNTA VANCOUVER (building).6, FROM QUEBEC .17th June.Mississippi.let Jul; Montreal July._ 8tb July.16th July.,22nd July.29th July.Mr Aug.12th Aug.19th Aug.26th Aug.2nd Sept.9th Sept.16th Sept.Ontario.Brooklyn.Toronto.;.Dominion.Mieeissippi.Montreal.Ontario.Brooklyn.Toronto.Dominion.Bates of Pasaage : Cabin, Quebec to Liverpool, $50 and $80 Return, $90 and $110.Prepaid Steerage Tickets «aed at the Lewes Through Tickets can be bad at all the pern cipal Grand Trunk Railway /Hcket Offices i n Canada, and Through Bills of\tare granted to and from all parts o Canada.For Freight or Passage apply, in London to Bowring, Jamieson 4 Co., 17 East India Avenue ; in Liverpool, to Fhnn Main A Mont goxnery, 24 James Street ; at all Grand Trunk Railway Offices ; or to DAVID TORE ANC* 4 CO., Exchange Court, Montreal, and WM.M.MACPHERSON, 75, Dalbourir Btrrzt, Quebec.Jane 16,1882.CUNARD LINE.RATES OF PASSAGE FROM QUEBEC : Cabin.$70.00 andl$80.00 (according to accommodation.Intermediate.A40.00 Steerage.$25.00 THE STEAMERS OF THE Liverpool, Queenstown, St.Johns, Halifax & Baltimore Mail Service Are intended to be despatched as follows : FROM HALIFAX AUSTRIAN.3rd July.NOVA SCOTIAN.17th \u201c PHŒNTCIAN.31st \u201c HIBERNIAN.14 Aug.Rates of Passage between Halifax and St.JohpV.Cabin.$20.00 Steerage.Intermediate.$15.00 .$6.00 At St.of war in class is always one-half the cost of the first, and the seventh one-seventh the ooet of the first.What English people do not understand is, that the only reason why the first-class Bordeaux wines are better than the seventh-class is that the former will keep longer than the latter.In twenty years a bottle of Lafitte ia better than it ever previously was, but two years after bottling, the seventh-class wine is often just as good as the Lafitte.Unless, therefore, wine be intended to be kept for a long time, it is a mistake to give a high price for a brand.A purchaser should rather go to some large wine merchant who does business on such a scale that he is a direct buyer from the producer, and ask for good claret.He should taste a bottle, ami if it pleases him he should give an order, with the certainty that he is obtaining for his money the pure juice of the Medoc wine.It is perfectly true that, owing to the ravages of the phylloxera, the value of cheap whies in France has gone up ; bat this only applies to wines formerly quoted at about £5 per hogshead At £9 or £10 per hogshead as much claret can be bought as we require, and the price of clarets which used to sell at that figure has not increased.Simultaneusly with the advent of narrow- Quite a number of thieves are in town.\ttrousers, the people are telling of a Two boys, Brown and Mooney, aged 10 and 6reat jncreaB6 ^ the number of spindles in 14 years, respectively, started off on baturday theeountrv to seek their fortune in the Far West, I the country, cording to the most approved plan of the dime novel.They reached Point Claire, when darkness set in, the rain descended and the youngster resolved to take the next train to town, which they did.There was a great procession of French retail clerks, in favor\u2019of early closing, this even- ^illis and Iveson, two English gentlemen who hunt in Canada annually, have killed fourteen bears in Metapedia, N.B., during the past month.They are now starting for the Rocky Mountains.The business of l\u2019Union Sucrière Franco-Canadienne, of Berthier, is to be sold at Sheriff\u2019s sale about the end of August.It will be carried on by one of the two or three syndicates forming it.Various causes are assigned for the failure, namely, the mismanagement and too many officials with high salaries.The whole expenditare, so far, is $300,000 and its debt $110,000.A little half-witted girl, supposed to be the child of an emigrant, has been found on the street by the police.In the Conrt House to-day, the death was announced of Geo.Pyke, Deputy Prothono-tary here, for 50 years** servant of the Government.He was the eldest son of the late Judge Pyke, Puisne Judge of the Queens Bench.He was admitted to the Bar in 1841, the same time as John Sleep Honey, senior Prothonotary, with whom he entered into Mr.Pyke has tilled his present » marry her, she was saying to tne i .\t.\t.\t.the post office corridor, yesterday ; A 1'A'7lter m * Von(io\u201c.P*?Isn\u2019t he a nice young man ?\u201d ®\u201c?ber °.ff.\u201cÜ1D/ other.\u201cWell, he\u2019s nice enough, docks od either side the Thai \u201cOb, I suppose he loves Sarah, and would be glad to marry her,\u2019\u2019 she was saying to the woman in \u201cbut I donne, asked the other.\u201cWell, he\u2019s nice enough, but very reckless with his mousy.At Christmas tame he made us a present of a French oloek for the parlor, and there\u2019s not one of us in the house can speak a word of French '.\u201d It waa to be expected that the.able\u2014but unknown and anonymous\u2014strategists who are\toa to write profoundly for the daily newspaper*, at ten minutes\u2019 notice, about the Egyptian muddle, should illustrate their capacity ayerr ere sarcasms on so mediocre and inexperienced a statesman a* Mr.Gladstone and on ao young and thoughtless a person sa Adipiral Seymour.\u2014Nw York Mdil and Hz-* * A writer in a London paper says that the which crowd the ____________________ mes must prove a real surprise to people who believe that it is all steam now-a-days.\u201cLet no in-shore dweller flatter himself that the sailing vessel is very nearly extinct.She may have one leg in the grave, but the other seems to j>os boss an astonishing amount of animation.The mansion of Baron Grant at Kensington containing filty-two carved and sculptured pieces of statuary and marble mantels, ten thousand feet of marble flooring and dadoes, two grand marble staircases with marble landings, caryatides in troope, and phalanxes 6f Corinthian columns, is to be torn to {tiecee and sold bit by bit.Qnebec&LakeSUfllmMway T7REIGHT AND PASSENGER TRAINo X?run daily (Sundays excepted) as follows :\u2014 Mixed\tMail.Leave Quebec (Palais SUtion).9.16 A.M.5.15 P.M.Arrive at St.Raymond.12.15 \u201c\t7.15 \u201c Mail.\tMukd.Leave St.Raymond.6.45 A.M.7.40 P.M.Arrive at Quebec.8.45 \u201c\t10 35 V Stopping at Little River, Ancienne Loretta, St.Ambroise, St.Gabriel, St.Catherines, Lake St Joseph, Lake Sergent and Bourg Louis.OB\u2019 Trains ran by Montreal Time.Trains connect at St An broise with Stages for Indian Loretta, and at Lake St.Joseph with Steamer \u201cSt.Joseph\u201d for all points on that beautiful Lake.Fare round the Lake 25 cents.Single Fare return Tickets on Saturdays.J.G.SCOTT, Sea 4 Manager, Commercial Chambers.LEVE 4 ALDEN, Ticket Agents.June 1,1882 Notice to Contractors TO SEALED TENDERS.ADDRESSED the undersigned, will be ^received at this FOR SALE THE PASSENGER SmMrîIHJTMD,\" Tonnage 648, having Two Low Pressure En gines, Ü0 Horse-Power combined.For price and particulars apply to The St Lawrence Steam Navigation Company, St Andrew\u2019s Wharf GABOURY, Secretary Feomary 4.1882 THE STEAMERS OF THF GLASGOW AND QUEBEC SEBVICE Are intended to soil from Quebec to Glasgow : BUENOS AYREAN.25th\tJune.GRECIAN.3rd\tJn y.LUCERNE.10th CANADIAN.Uth KM Berths not secured until paid for.An experienced Surgeon carried on each Through Bills of Lading granted in Liverpool and at Continent* Ports' to all Points in Canada and the Western States, A Tender with Mails and Passengers for Liverpool Mail Steamers will leave the Napoleon Wharf every Saturday morning, at nine o\u2019clock precisely For further particulars apply to\u201e ALLANS, RAE 4 CO., Agents, June 24, 1882.N O TI C E.LANE ROUTE.ihei Canard Steamship Company Limited.TVETWEEN NEW YORK and LIVER JL> POOL calling at CORK HARBOR, From Pier 46N.R.,New York, Servi*.Wednesday, 26th July Scvthia.Wednesday, 2nd Aug Bothnia.».Wednesday, 9th Aug Pari hia.;.Wednesday, Wth Aug Gallia.Wednesday,\tSfad.Aug Sèrvia.Wednesday, SOth Aug Scythia.WednesdsfyiffflfSept Bothnia.Wadneeday.\tlathSept And every following Wednesday from New York\t\u2019\u2019 \"i BATES OF PASSAGE./; $80 and $100, according to accommodation, Steerage at very low rates Steerage ticket rom Liverpoo and Qneeostown and all other parts of Europe at owest rates oJ.GdO.lKL_ Through bul of lading given (is Belfast, GlaMpow, Havre, Antwerp and other ports on ths Continent ,and for MedRerraneea aerta.For freight ana passage apply at the Company\u2019s Office, No.4.Bowlin Green VERNON H.BROWN 4 Co., Agents.July 21.1882.\t\u2019\t.won office for thirty-five years, ably and well.He has been in declining health for a year and a half.His wife diedabout a month ago.His remains were conveyed to Como, Lakeof Two Mountains, for burial in the family vault.Mr.Pyke served as Captain in the Canadian Rifles in 1837-8.He was about 70 years of age, and leaves a son and a brother, Rev.J.Pyke, Rector of the Church of England, at Como.RHEUMATISM, George William Curtis in 1855 became a silent partner in the business firm of Dix, Edwards & Co., the publishers of Putnam's Monthly.He invested $10,000 in the cok-cern ; but had no part in its management.Two years later the Arm failed, and Mr.Curtis through some informality in drawing up the articles of partnership was declared to be legally responsible for a portion of its debts.Many of his friends held that he was in no way bound beyond the $10,000, and urged him to tost the ouestion in the Cfurts.Mr.Curtis refused, altnough the decision involved the assumption by him of a dsbt of $100,000.He surrendered all his property.by most arduous labor, lari dollar Heuralgia, Sciatica, Lumbago, Backache, Soreness of the ChesU Scut, Quinsy, Sore Throat, Swell» ings and Sprains, Burns and Scalds, General Bodily Paine, Tooth, Ear and Headache, Frosted Feet and Ears, and all other Paine and Aches.Mo YTvpsrvtio* en \u2022*rth «quail Sr J*£ow O»* M \u2022 safo, sum, simpte and cheap k«w«dr.A tola: \u2022Dtc.ll» but th* comp«r»U»«ly trifling outlay «T 60 resta, and \u2022»«ry on* «ufftr-lag with pain cam ba.* chaap and poalUva proof of ttaalaiws.Enaction» tu BUvan Langrar* ¦OLD BY ALLDBUGaiBTS AND DEALEBfc IX MEDICINE A, VOGELER & CO.Hull in.,r*.ttdL.tf.5 J.INFORM ÂTÏÔTWANTED.51QU LU* 1 ittoi THOMAS 11L UKSTOCK.Office until Weteiay, tM Ifitli Aipt tit INCLUSIVELY For the Construction of a Hew Parliament Honse, at Quebec.The Plans and Specification of the work may be seen at this Office, every day, after the 31st July next, between the hours ofjlO.iA.M and 4 P.M1 The Tenders muet be endorsed : \u201cTender for new Parliament House.\u201d The Department will not be bound to accept the lowest nor any of the Tenders.By order, ERNEST GAGNON, Secretary.Department of Agriculture ) and Public Works, > Quebec, 13th June, 1882.) N.B.\u2014No re production unleaal byTspecial written order.June 14, 1882.\tZN SEASIDEJREADINC ! JUST RECEIVED: Choice selections from ti Franklin Square and Seaside Series,\u2014oom-prixing some of the Best Works of Modern Fact and Fiction from the Best Authors of the day,\u2014from 10 cents to 25 cents each.Also Routledge\u2019s Cheap Series of Scott s Novels, Cooper\u2019s, Ma-ryatt\u2019e, Magazines.Fashion B >oks, Harper\u2019» Weekly and Frank Leslie, Children\u2019s Picture Books, Books of Travel and Adventure, Scientific and Philosophical Works, Notes on Canada, Picturesque Quebec, Literary Sheaves, Guide to the City and its Environs Guide to Manitoba and the Great West.Johnston's New Map of the Dominion of Canada.Maps of the Province, Mai»s of the Eastern Townshiirs.Bayfield\u2019s Cnarts of the Gulf and River ot.Lawrence, separate sheets for separate localities.We have a quantity of Back Numbers of Corn-hill, Belgravia, Bow Bells.Good Words, Sunday Magazine, Chambers Journal ; and a great many others, for J cents each, many of these consecutive numbers Good all's and De LaRue\u2019s Stationery in cases.For sale by DAWSON 4 CO.July 14* 1881_________________ NEW BOOKS.OOrMIJP-A-ITT- ROYAL MAIL LINE *ix rr TXT T?T?^ QUEBEC AND MONTREAL The Steamer \u201cSaguenay,\u201d CAPT.M.LECOURS, TTNTIL FURTHER NOTICE WTLjlj U leave the BL AndrewVWharf 0» FBI DAYS and TUESDAYS, at 7.30 .AM., for Chicoutimi and Ha ! Ha 1 Bat, and will atop at Baie St.Paul, lie aux Coudina, XeaStteule- In sixteen years, __y< .writing and lecturing, he paid the U of tha debt.Madame Tnesaud has bought for her new building the marble staircases of Kensington House, which are supported by colossal statuée renreeepting the Season*, first erected at j a;ed»t o! more than fifty thotuand dollar*, INFORMATION RESPECTING THE X above will be gladly received by his friends in England,.Known to have been living in Quebec 35 or 40 years ago.Address,\t^L.Ü-» \u201cCHRONICLE\" July 15,1882,\tLf PATENTS We continu to act aa Solicitor* for Patents Caveats, Trade Marks, Copyrights, eto., for the United States, Canada, Cuba, England, France* Germany act, We have bad thirty-Mys year* experience.Patents obtained through us are noticed theSoixirnno Amkkiqak.This argeandsplen did ill art rated weekly paper, $3.20 a year, shows the Progress of Science, ia very interest ing, and has an enormous circulation, Address MUNN 4 CO.Patent Solicitors Publishers of BoiUTino Ankbiosh, 87, Paik Row, New York.Hand book about Patent sent free, November 25, 181 PICTURESQUE QUEBEC, by J.M.Le* Mo'ne- .» ^ ^ The Life of Garibaldi, by J.T.Bent.\t.Old and i\\ew Canada\u20141753 1844\u2014Histone Scenes and Social Pictures, by P.Bender, MD.Good Words for April\u2014a fresh supply, con taining Pictures of Quebec with notes, by H.R.H.the Princess Louise, and a Poem by H.E.the Marquis of Lome.The Chronicles of the St.Lawrence, by J.M.LeMoine.Hood\u2019s Own Laughter from Year to Year, with Original Illustrations.People\u2019s 6d.Edi-tiop.Literary Sheaves ; or La Literature au Canada Français, bv P.Bender.Our Set\u2014a Collection of Stories by Annie Thomas.Chansons Populaires du Canada, par E.Gagnon Elbow Room\u2014a Novgl without a Plot, by Max Adler.Illustrated Sixpenny Edition.Without a Home, by Rev.E.P.Roe.Sermons on Special occasions, Preached Westminster Abbev.by Arthur Stanley D.D., late Dean of Westminster.AND A KCBTHKB SÜPFUf OF Wedduig Numbers of Illustrated London News and London Graphic.For sale by DAWSON 4 CO Jun_________________________________ ÆimiSiiï NswavAnrs Advsrtibtag A«r**t*, w* Grtivva* Sireat, DtTXOIT ITCH om oatbmisoé kc «MM* foe oârortitiie Is thlt At v ; - T\u2019tYir THIS MAGNIFICENT LINE, COMPOS-ed of the following first-class Side-Wheel Steamers, viz.AND MONTREAL.jo, Capt.Nelson, will leave Napoleon Wharf every Tuesdays, Thursdays and Saturdays at 5 o\u2019clock P.M.MONTREAL, Iron, Capt.Roy, everv Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays, at 5 o'clock P.M., calling at Intermediate Ports, and arriving early in the morning.North Shore Railway Tickets will be good on the above Steamers.BETWEEN IVCoxx'tx\u2019ore.l cfe JELcaxxxULtoxx* CORSICAN, SPARTAN, CORINTHIAN, PASSPORT.ALGERIAN, new MAGNET, One of which will leave daily the Canal Basin at 9 o'clock, and Lachine on the arrival of the Train leaving Bonavkntcrb Station at Noon, for ___ ~ JVT I Xs T O KT And Intermediate Ports, making direct oon nection at PRESCOTT AND BROCKVILLE With the Railways for Ottawa City, Kempt ville, Pkbth, A&npbiob, Ac.; at TORONTO AND HAL ILTON With the Railways for Coli' a wood Saclt Ste.Maris, Fort William, Duluth, Strat-fobd, London, Chatham, Sarnia, Detroit, Chicago, Milwaukee, Galena, Greek Bay, St.Paul and Fort Garry, and with the STEAMER \u201cCITY OF TORONTO\u201d For ^Niagara, Lewiston, Niagara Falls, Buffalo, Cleveland, Toledo, Cincinnati, 4c.SOUTH SHORE LINK for Alexandria Bay, Thousand Island» Park, Round Island Park and Clayton daily, (Sunday excepted) and for Oswego, Charlotte, Rochester, on Mondays, Wednesdays and Saturdays, at 9 A.M.TICKET OFFICE, where State Rooms can be secured, at R.M.STOCKING, opposite St.Louis Hotel, and at Office, Nat>oleon Wharf, A.DES FORCES, Agent.May 22.1882.\tapl28 For further information apply at tbeCom! pany\u2019s Office, St.Andrew\u2019s Wharf A.GABOURY, Secretory.May 23.1882'_ -, Machine Oils.&c ttcCOLL BROS.Ss CO., TQT* OZVTI\u2019O, Manufacturers and Dealers nr MACHINE AHDLÂMP0ILS.OUR MEDALS and THREE DIPLOMAS Awarded to hem last year by the .cading Exhibitions «( the Doainien.NOTICE TO MAEINEKS.T H K \u201cTIME BALL\u201d ON the Citadel ,each day.(Sunday excepted),athalf-past Twelve o\u2019clock, will be hoisted half way up, and at five minutes to \u201cOne\u201d it will be hoirted to the top, and at \u201cOne o clock.\u201d Mean Time, it will be dropped.A Cnronometer keeping \u201cGreenwich Time\u201d should then show 5h.44m.49s., and the difference between this and the time shown by the face of her Chronometer is its error on \u201cGreen wich Mean Time\u201d at that instant.N.B.\u2014Should the \" Ball,\u201d by accident, drop at the wrong time, it will immediately be hoisted half-mart, and kept theie half an hour.E.D.ASHE, Commander Roy a Navy.iw.\tF&i8 -SEND FOR PRICE* eto.March 10.1882.Lm JOSEPH ÔfLLOTT\u2019S a STEEL PENS.BY ALL DEALERS THROUGHOUT THE WORLD.January 29 1882* The High Reputation and extensive sale of the o d, tms treed and well proved .\t.COOK\u2019S FKBEÎTÜ BAILING have moved unscrupulous parties to i packages in which it is sold, and even te spp prude a part of its name as means of foisting consumers a powder containing (foe cheepne Alum in large quantity.'RESERVE YOUR HEALTH only tbs Gao nine COOK\u2019S FR wel known to contain NO Alum nor i noxious drug.ew See that the full name* In large letters, printed across the direction* for neev- For Sale oth bI Respectable Grèce* verywtaere.w.d.McLaren, 55, Codage Strett, Montre* DecemnerSO 1881.\t\u201c -4 ir.ySl'90 PUBLISHED TIMBER TRADES JSBMAI AND SAW MILL ADVXRTIBKR, A NRWBPAPR* fob thb Piioe 4d.Annual subacriptke 17*.\u2022$.« free.Foreign subscription* XL*,, pret frea PUBLISHED BY * Ja*W, RIBUt, 14_______L Close Lont*ii.B.Ca Cheques end P.O.O.to be tnmme h WILLIAM RIDEE, mit M«bW T T THF MORNING CHROMCLE, TUESDAY.JULY 25\t1882.NSW ADVERTISEMENTS.Link L'»st -5 », D'A'scuillon Stiwt.Notice\u2014II Fitlken be rg.N arae Wanted\u2014B'k of B N A.Bi'vck and Tan Dog L at\u2014Dr F £ Roy.Vi \u2019«bec Board of Trade\u2014F H Andrews.Wigan Steam Goad\u2014Wilson A Co.Sale nr Tr*h Whiskey, Porter, Ale, Ao\u2014A J Mai ham A Co.Excursion to Lake St Joseph\u2014J G Scott.Wanted to Charter\u2014Wilson A Co.Tapissier Freres\u2019 Grease Proof Silk.Notice- Carl Aug Haggdahl.Copying Press Wanted\u2014This Office.Gfrid Spectacles Lost\u2014E II Taylor.Abeorptive Treatment\u201431, Stanislaus Street.Grand Trunk Railway\u2014Joseph Hickson.See 1st Page.St Jacob\u2019s Oil\u2014A Vogeler A Co, STRAWBERRIES! -FOR SALE BY- _A_ ^KT^TTEIRS- Juné SO, 1882.QttBEC, TUESDAYJILY 25.1882 MANUFACTURES IN SOME AMERI CAN CITIES.There is always food for reflexion in census returns.We have, of late, given many interesting particulars from the Dominion census of 1881, and the subject is by np means exhausted yet.Some wonderful lessons can always be learned from a diligent examination of the figures therein presented.They exhibit at a glance, the industrial, economical, commercial, social and religious progress made by the country during a limited period of years, and they always furnish interesting data for the historian, the journalist, and the politician.We have certainly made great progress during the last decade of years, in almost every branch, embraced by the returns, and in manufacturing enterprise, our strides have been more real and tangible than the progress we have made in other directions, important as many of these unquestionably have been.Manu, factoring is, to a large extent, our hope for the future, and we owe much to the N.P.for the stimulus which our waning industries have received, and for the development which commercial and industrial enterprises have experienced all over the country, particularly during the last couple of years, when most of our people went to work in sober earnest, and the capitalists loosened the strings of their purses.Often times the progress of another country teaches a salutary lesson to lands adjoining it, and we propose, this morning, to show what our neighbours in the United States are doing.The census bureau of the great Republic baa just sent out some valuable taoles, which exhibit the state of manufacturée in the twenty largest cities of the Union.As the Boston Advertiser, in commenting on this exhibit, points out^ the figures are useful only, so fat as they go.Their value is limited, as only those manufactures are included, the operations of which take place within the limits of the great cities.For our pur-t pose, however, the returns will, in a large measure, meet the object, which we have in view, at this moment.Boston manufacturing is reported to have produced in the year ended 31st of May, 1880, $123,- 3ôo,157, against $109,757,590 pro duced in Brooklyn, New York.Chicago, Illinois, produced the enormous figures $241,045,007.\tThe manufactured products of New\tYork city are set down at $448,209,248, of which over $90,000, CO J were paid for wages to about 218 000 workers, supporting over one-half of the entire city population.The average wage-receiver earned nearly $260 a year.The great American city makes nearly $80,000,000 worth of clothing, for itself .And the whole country ; a^so $4,298,684 worth of artificial flowers and feathers, $22,668,980 worth of tobacco and cigars ; it does a large amount of lard-refining, meat-packing, and shirt-making, but it manufactures, strange to say, no cotton wool, iron, or copper.Philadelphia turns out of its vast boot and shoe factories over $9,000,000 worth of those necessary articles.Her carpet looms shew a total of $14,000,000 in round numbers.In cotton goods her factories send out $16,000,000 worth in a year, and the woollen and worsted goods industries exhibit a total of nearly $30,000,000,\u2014quite a respectable shewing, all things considered.In the latter industry Quebec hopes to make a good shewing, one of these days.Phila delphia is first in drugs and chemicals, her products in them realizing the handsome figures $11,804,793, against $3,694,178 worth manufactured by New York and $450,901 in Boston, during the same period of time.Baltimore, Md., manufactures fertilizers to the extent of $4,287,398, beating New York and Boston combined, the former making only $1,231, \\\t170 in tb© year, and the latter producing only $314,%1 worth.In fruit and vegetable preserves Baltimore returns a total of $5,201,298, while her tobacco reaches the sum of $3,082,438.In tobaccos and cigars, Detroit made $2,309,016 worth, Louisville $2,997,644 and San Francisco $3,120,813.Boston made of men\u2019s clothing, some $16,157,892 worth, iron and ateel are returned at $2,189,987, and the sugar interest is returned at $16,518,760 In this latter article and molasses, Brooklyn leads the cities of the Union with nearly $60,000,000, to nearly $23,000,000 in Jersey City, $1,500,000 in New Orleans.and $11,000,000 in New York.In paints $5,284,201 worth are produced Buffalo leads with glucose and grape-sugar representing $3,075,000.Chicago makes steel and iron to the ex tent of ten millions of dollars.The returns in this industry from Cleveland, Ohio, shew the very same figures, from Pittsburg, Pa., they aggregate over $35,490,634, and in Philadelphia $4,000,000.In men s clothing Chicago manufactures $17,342,207, and in machinery of all kinds $4,568,636, against $5,340,266 in Boston, $3,930,185 in Providence, Rhode Island, $3,957,761.in Pittsburg, $9,684,927 in Philadelphia and $9,216,713 in New York.The meat-packing business of Chicago reached during the year, embraced by the returns, the stupendous figures of $85,-324,371, to less than $12,000,000 in Cincinnati, $18,500,000 in Jersey City, #7,000,000 in Boston, $8,500,000 in Sk.Louis, $8,000,000 in Brooklyn, and $29,000,000 in New York.St Louis leads m flour (nearly $14,000,000 to $4,000,000 in Milwaukee.) Newark leads in leather (nearly $15,000,000) gold \u2022nd silver refining, (nearly $9,000,000 to less than $3,000,000 in New York,) while Providence leads in jewelry i $5,500,000 $4,000,000 in Newark, and $5,000,000 in New York.) Newark also leads in trunks and valises ($2,000,000 to $600,000 in Boston, and $666,766 in New York), while while New York leads in canes and umbrellas $3,000,000, to less than ($3 -000,000 in Philadelphia, and $50 -000 in Boston.) Naw Orleans made cotton seed oil to the value of $2,751,150.Providence in «tnmg in woollens and worsted*, and Sun Francisco manufactures a very ^reat variety of articles of general usefulness.Boston manufactures a considerable amount of leather.Those returns will be found valuable for reference.The Advertiser thinks they illustrate the importance qf mifiufacturing over trading as a means of making cities populous and perhaps prosperous.There is a good deal in that.Might Canadians not find it so also.Quebec, for instance, might become a great manufacturing town.She is admirably situated for factories, has open communication by land and sea, excellent water power, a cheap scale of wage and a thrifty, hardy population.The future of Quebec might lie in manufacturing.We have traded a good deal in the past.Why not embark now on a new system of enterprise Î The N.P.helps the manufacturer\u2014more than any other class in the community.Why not avail ourselves of this important force, which suggests so great a future for our people ?NOTES AND NEWS French-Caaadiana.The Bangor IFAij/ says A State appointment and intelligence bureau, for Canadians, which was talked about during the sessions of the recent Freuch-Canadiaa convention, has been started.The central bureau will have headquarters in Lewiston.J.D.Mont-marouet is president.Corresponding bureaus will be established in every French community in this State, and they will report to the central bureau.The Telephone In Use : The Battle Heard 1,000 KUes Off.An interesting telephonic experiment was tried at Malta, during the bombardment of the forts at Alexandria.A telephone was attached at Malta to the Alexandria cable, and connection was made with the other\u2019 end of the cable on board the \u201cChiltern,\u201d off Alexandria.It was found that, owing either to the distance or to the vibration caused by the firing, it was impracticable to send a verbal message, but the firing at Alexandria was distinctly heard, through the telephone, at Malta\u2014a distance of more than a thousand miles.Madame Bnault Condemned by the Clergy.On Sunday last, Mr.Curd Plamondon, of St John's Church, told his hearers to be on their guard against charlatans.He did not deny that Madame Euault could extract teeth, but there he held that her power stopped, and he strongly urged hiu people to put their dollars to better uses tuan to throw them away upon quackery, and not to allow themselves to be imposed upon by a female charlatan.He urged the infirm to undertake a pilgrimage to Ste.Anne de Beaupre.It God willed their cure, it was there, he said. hiiiaoiiM, whose ling petforiuauce would have been considered worthy of old \u201cAst-ley\u2019H.\u2019\u2019 and that would do credit to the Cirque of the Champs Klysees.It is the ideal of the good old Emilish circus.To particularize, Aestor and Fenon are well knowiw-to the frequenters of tire Crystal Palace, the Alhambra.and the Royal Westminster Aquarium, as the most gracetul, powerful and daring trapezists that have performed since the days of L-\u2018otard ; their feats have been chronicled by the English and Continental press.They display an amount of daring seldom witnessed, yet the whole of their acts are executed with considerable grace, and without any apparent effort.Herr Nyegaard, the riding-master, has for nine years occupied a similar position in Rentz\u2019s circus, the \u201cAstley\u201d of Germany, and his expert black stallion '\u2018Bismarck,\u201d bred in the celebrated shed of Tra-kehue.which supplies the German and Russian Imperial families with horses, is admired as much for its cleverness, which testifies to its master\u2019s careful traiuing, as for its magnificent appearance.No pads are used in the bareback riding, of which different species are exhibited.James Robinson, the unrivalled champion bareback rider, has a reputation that praise cannot enhance.Clarence Robinson, together with Misses Linda and Alena Jeal, are each and all perfect equestrians.Peter Conklin, the clown, is simply a new departure in the )taiUasse line, and a considerable improvement on his stereotyped predecessors of the sawdust, whilst his colleague.the jester Friz, is a facial contortionist, who is successful in exciting the merriment of the audience without uttering a syllable.The so-called \u201cboneless\u201d and astounding Farranti, the tumblers, and the four-horse riding by the ladies, which concludes the entertainment, are of the highest order.We certainly expect to-day to see the circus packed at each performance.Tickets will be sold at Raymond's stationary store, 48, Fabrique street, on days of exhibition, at the usual slight advance.zegT^Ipt.Refugees Swarming into Alex-a ndria.THEIR STORIES OF HORRIBLE MASSACRES.A SKIRMISH WITH ARABES CAVALRY AT RAM LE H.THE BRITISH OCCUPY THE PLACE.ARABES TOTAL FORCE ESTIMATED AT 100,000 MEN.A FRENCH VOTE FOR THE PROTECTION OF THE CANAL.A Letter to Mr.Gladstone.Alexandria, July 24\u2014The town continues to swarm with relugeea, who bring terrible accounts of massacres at Tantah, Damietta and elsewhere.An eye-witness from Tantah states that 85 Europeans were tortured, disembowelled and torn to pieces.Women were violated aud tortured.The soldiers participated iu the atrocities.Arabi\u2019s new Government has issued a proclamation stating that every native iiiolenting Christians will lie shot.It is bel.eved this is a mere lorm to cover themselves should they fall iuto British hands.Constantinople, July 24\u2014There is reason to believe that Arabi Pasna has sent a species of ultimatum to the Sultan, declaring he is acting to save Islam from the infidels and giving the Sultan notice that if the Porte sends troops to co-operate with the unbelievers be will fijiht them and proclaim Sheretf of Mecca Caliph.It is believed here that Arab! has threatened to depose the house of Osman and proclaim Jesad ruler iu its place.Alexandria, July 24\u2014Two Germans of Tuikah, who were sheltered by the statmn-mastcr until the tram was ready to start, were caught entering the train, tueir heads held over the carriage door and their throats cut.Another Christian was placed ou the rails and the engine run to aud fro over him.Arabi is flooding the country in front of his entrenchments.It is considered certain Arabi will destroy Cairo unless defeated and captured.The troop ship \u201cMalabar,\u201d with eleven hundred men and a battery of artillery arrived to-day.According to the latest news from Cairo 8,000 starving and homeless persons are camping iu the Esbeh gardens.There is great mortality among them.- The 60th Rifles marched to occupy Ramleh this morning.Some skirmishing is now proceeding.The 30th Infantry have been ordered to support the 60th Rifles.Arabi\u2019s infantry are reported concentrated at Damieltas.The Rifles and Mounted Infantry occupied Ramleh early this morning.They stationed one gattling and one field gun at the bridge over the canal.The enemy\u2019s cavalry appeared and galloped boldly along the railway at 300 yards range, but fled upon a volley being fired.After a short time they reappeared with two guns, with which they opened fire ineffectiudlv upon the British, who took to cover.By nine o\u2019clock the firing had ceased, but the enemy was expected to reappear with reinforcements.Crow-ther, one of the two English engineers reported massacred at Tantah, has arrived here.The commander of the Fort at Aboukir, though flying a flag of truce, refused to allow any Englishmen to enter the fort ; he is probably really holding the fort in the interest of Arabi.Arabi occupied an extended line from MaisotU to Aboukir ; his force is estimated at 700.The first skirmish lasted about an hour.One or two of the English were hit.Several Egyptians seemed fu fall.Arabi is again advancing.The fighting is finished.The casualties ore insignificant.The British troops remain in occupation of Ramleh.Two of the deputation appointed by the notables have arrived.They report that Arabi, learning of the despatch of troops from India to Egypt, sent a reinforcement of 9,000 men to Cairo.Yesterday, five thousand Nubians with Egyptians marched to Aboukir, under Abdel-lah Facha, and began to construct earthworks.Arabi now has 200 guns mounted on the earthworks between Mayalla and Kafr El Dwar.Stone Facha thinks unless England acts with at least forty thousand troops she will meet with a Bull Run.It is thought had five hundred men lauded immediately after the bombardment the burning and looting would have been prevented.The new native tribunal passed capital sentences yesterday for the first time in the Ottoman Empire on Mussulmans upon Christian evidence.The sentence will be carried out by the Egyptians.Canastral, July 24\u2014A surveyor arrived from the interior, reports the total force of the rebels at nearly one hundred thousand.He says a volunteer cavalry regiment is forming to attack Alexandria.Arabi\u2019s front fell back last evening to the other side of Ramleh, thus forming the above mentioned operation on the British.London, July 24\u2014The question of Turkish intervention is practically decided by the fact that an expedition cannot be sent without denuding the distant provinces of troops and even reducing the garrison of Con-stantiuoplo.Arabi Faoha wrote the following to Mr.Gladstone a few days before the bombardment.Mr.Gladstone did not receive it until after tha bombardment :\u2014\u201cThe Koran commands ns to resist if war is urged against us.hence England may rest assured the first gun she fires in Egypt will absolve the Egyptians from all treaties.Control will cease aud the property of Europeans be confiscated ; tne canals will be destroyed and the Gehad will be preached in .Syria, Arabia and India.The first blow with which England strikes Egypt will cause blood to flow through the breadth of Asia and Africa, the responsibility for which will bo on the head of England.Egypt is still ready to be fast friends with Eugiand and keep her road to India, but she must keep within the limits of her jurisdiction.Finally England may rest, assured we are determined to fight for our country.\u201d Paris, July 24.\u2014In the Chamber of Deputies to-day, the Minister of Marine moved a credit of 9,500,000 francs for the protection of the Suez Canal.M.de Lesseps telegraphs that Arabi has dcclated an intention to respect neutrality on the 8ues Canal.Madrid, July 24.\u2014The Government has decided to despatoh three additional frigates to Egypt for the protection of the Suez Canal.Alexandria, July 24\u2014The rebels are distributed as follows One division outside Cairo, two regiments in Cairo, two divisions at Kafr El Dwar, thtee thousand infantry at Rosetta, and 7,000 at Damietta ; each division consists of four regiments of infantry of 740 each, two regiments of cavalry of 800 men each, one regiment of artillery of 700 men aud 36 guns.Four thousand civilians were taken from necessary works on the Nile to eutrench Kafr El Dwar.Arabi Pasha holds a battalion aud a battery of two squadrons in readiness to check any British advance.Parties of British brought 60 prisoners from Ramleh to-day.The occupying force is entrenching.A Turkish corvette has arrived here.The British have cut the Turkish telegraph wire to Stamboul.London, July 24\u2014The Queen has sanctioned the appointment of Liautanant-tieneral Willis and Major-General Hawley to the command of the 1st and 2nd filraions, the Duko of Connaught to tho command of a iirijzude of the guards, and General Graham, Major-.jeneral Allison and MajorJieneral Evelyn Wood to tho command of the 2nd, 3rd and 4th brigades respectively.Drury Lowe will command the cavalry.Cork, July 24 \u2014A proclamation was posted .here to-night calling on the first class of the i ftr»»y reserve to assemble before the 2nd of August.Alexandria, July 24\u2014An Italian refuge saw 85 European bodies lying iu the streets of 'lantah.Their intestines were being flung at the w\u2019indows and about the streets.A Greek\u2019s throat was hacked with a penknife and two English women jumped from a window in the endeavor to escape massacre and were killed.Arabi Pacha put on a train to to carry away the Christian survivors.One hundred persons boarded it, and a determined attempt was then made to murder them ; it was only frustrated by a friendly native causing the train to start.One of the members of the deputation representing the Notables brought a copy of the proclamation secretly circulated by Raghb Pasha, stating that England had declared war against all Egyptians.The Khedive consequently has been strongly advised to dismiss Raghb from the Ministry and place him under arrest.It is hoped os the Ministry were creatures of Arabi the Khedive will dismiss them and form a new Ministry under Cherif Pasha.The Egyptian projectile# burst too high to do damage during the skirmish to-day ; in consequence of this the British escaped heavy loss.The Egyptians advanced lioldly, but without judgment, as they might easily have caught all the mounted infantry.All mule cart-drivers engaged by the commissariat have deserted to Arabi.The British Consul has informed the Khedive that England has recognized his present Ministry and urged him to appoint a successor to Arabi.There is no doubt two of the present Ministers daily communicate with Arabi.A Gigantic Colonization Fraud.As the cable informe# us that the Marquis de Rays had been arrested at Barcelona and would he extradited to France, one of the most curious and cruel swindles of the century may be regarded as having entered upon its final phase.In the fall of 1879 placards were posted in Paris and other French cities inviting those dissatisfied with the Old World to join the colony of Port Breton, which was to be under the patronage of the Virgin.Laborers and artisans were not alone invited ; soldiers were urged to enlist under the white flag bearing a portrait of the mother of God, and to extend the borders of the colony fighting against the heathen Many poor people of Catholic and Royalist proclivities joined the colony, which was elaborately organized \u2014for instance, the streets were to vary in width according as they were inhabited by the aristocracy, the bourgeoisie or the laboring classes\u2014aud a wonderful land system was laid out, under which each colonist was to obtain a huge block of fertile soil at ten francs the hectare, \u201call their interests being under the direct protection of Religion.\u201d The French Government\u2014suspecting, if not a fraud, at least inadequate preparations, to say nothing of possible international complications- refused to let he \u201cChandernagor,\u201d which had been chartered by the Marquis de Kays, take her passengers on board at Havre ; so did the Belgian Government when the vessel went to Antwerp, but finally the Dutch authorities at Flushing proved more complaisant, and the \u201cship of fools\u201d cleared thence by night, September 14, 1879.On tho 17th of January, 1880, she rescued her destination on the island of New Ireland, about 200 miles east of New Guiuea.O: the eighty-four colonists seventeen had been iauued en route at Langlan, about 240 miles distant, with provision* for eight months.The main body was received with no particular enthusiasm by the natives.Precisely what happened thereafter it is not easy to decide, the diflerent versions varying widely.According to that which seem* the most accurate, they found that they would nave to work hard to make a tolerable living, and as some were unskilled eutnusiaats and others idle adventurers, the prcqiect was not pleasing.They were without doctor or medicines ; the \u201cChandernagor\u201d sailed away and leltthem ; some succumbed to au epidemic of boils ; others died of despair.The more vigorous got along living on lizards aud parrots and drinking brackish water By the 27th of August only twenty of the sixiy-seveu remained ; they were taken oil by an English vessel.Thu \u201cChauderna-gur\u2019s\u201d commander alleged^hat her anchors having been carried away the ship had been compelled to make for Sydney, with a large portion of her stores on board, but there were ugly rumors that the colonists had been abandoned deliberately , and that the stores were sold in Australia.Two other vessels were chartered by M.de Raya at Barcelona and sent out with Spanish Carlists and Italians\u2014the \u201cIndia\" with 760 colonists and a smaller steamer, the \u201cGervil.\u201d Provisions, however, were not sent forward, and after vainly endeavoring to wring a livelihood from the soil the survivors, half starved, made their way to Noumea.There they were supported for some time by the French authorities.and the \u201cIndia\u201d being condemned as unseaworthy, they were finally sent back to Europe.The Marquis, however, did not, for all this, discontinue his operations, but \u201crenouncing for the moment his nationality,\u201d settled at Barcelona to direct the enterprise.At one time a good deal of scandal was caused by the announcement of his agents that they were preparing to colonize Northern Australia, and bad blocks of lands there for sale cheap, a proceeding to which the English Government naturally demurred.In March, 1882, he registered at Marseilles a deed by which Maragano, King of Latnboum, ceded the island of New Ireland to him for the sum of 1,600 francs.According to the French papers, the Marquis has been doing literally a \u201cland office business,\u201d having sold $3,000,000 worth of plantations and farms to his dupes.A prominent officer of the enterprise, M.Leon Roubaud, was arrested at Marseilles last month and the Marquis was called upon to answer to charges of violating the emigration laws, committing homicide through culpable negligence, and obi&ining money under false pretenses, but he declined to leave Barcelona and put in peril the great and sacred interests of her colony.Just at the same time came from Manila a letter from the Abbe Denis, a priest whom the Marquis had sent over to Port Breton to take charge of its spiritual residents.Father Denis and his 100 companions found it \u201ca volcanic rocki a den of fever and a graveyard,\u201d and' after three months of sickness and semi-starvation, were taken off by a Spanish ship and carried to Manila, where at last accounts they were living on charity.And in spite of all these exposures and these arrests the Marquis was then (June 18) finding numerous purchasers for his land at 50 francs the hectare and was publishing the twenty-eighth monthly list of \u201cgifts received for the support of the colony,\u201d among the donors being the commander of a French frigate, numerous land-owners and many Catholics and Catholic associations, their gifts varying in amount from 6 francs to 100.The French Government has just pensioned for life a woman who sold to it for a trifling sum a vase which turns out to be one of the sacred vases of Siam, probably stolen by some sailor, aud of inestimable value, as none like it are to be had.Lady Blanche Butler was recently nuuried by the Bishop of Tuam to Colonel Cuthbert Edwardes, brother of Lord Kensington.The Marquis of Ormonde gave her away, and four of her eight bridemaids were children, in white satin and velvet gauze, with bouquets of white pinks and m&idcn-h&ir.A simple herb found on the sunny plains of a Southern clime has, under the skillful manipu lotion of Dr.Van Boren, proved one of the greatest blessing, ever sent to suffering humanity.Dr.Van Bursn\u2019s Kidney Cure is acknowledged all the world over as the only perfect remedy tor kidney troubles.Your druggist has it.\td&w R.O.Bruoe, druggist, Tara, rays : 1 have no roedioine on mv shelves that sells faster or gives better aatisfaotion than Dr.Thomas\u2019 Eclectric Gil.ana tbs sale is constantly increasing, the past vear being the largest I have ever had.(Joe of my customers was cured of catarrh by using three bottles Another was raised out of bed, where he had been laid up tor a long time with a lame back, by u.ingtwo bottles.I ha vs lots of customs», who would not be without it over night.July 22, 1889.\tJm d&w WHITE SKIRTS! I QPECIAL ATTENTION 18 C ALLED TO O the Largs Stosk which we have of the above.Embroidered Skirts, 75c, aud 11.00, ExtraDeep Embroidery, $1,25 & $1,50 Very Fine Embroidery, $2,00, $2,50, and $3,50.Plain White Skirts, Tucked, 50c, SIMONS & FOULDS, FABRIQUE STREET.July 12, 18«2.i/o/ttneav\u2019s alls and Ointment.\u2014Bilious affections, with all their concomitant annoyances induced by atmo-.pheric change-, or too liberal di«t, should be checked nt once, or H«rinuB c> n-sequences may ensue.When anv one finds his ideas less clear than usual, hise>esight dimmed, and his head dizzy, accompanied by a disinclination fi>r all exertion, physical or mental, he may be quite sure that bn is in immediate need of some alterative medicine.Let him at once send for a box of Holloway's Pills a mild course of which will remove the symptom* and tqieed-ily renew his usual healthful feeling.If the bowels be irritable, Holloway\u2019s Ointment should be diligently rubbed over the sfomach and liver every night and morning.July 22, 18M.\tLm-ho d&w BOX\u2019S AND GENTLEMEN'S SUMMER CLOTHING I OUR STOCK OF THE ABOVE GOODS will be found well assorted with the Latest Styles for the season.Boy\u2019s Linen Suits,.$1.25 upwards.Boy\u2019s Serge Suits,.$2.75 upwards.Boy\u2019s Tweed Suits,.$3.25 upwards.Boy\u2019s Jeraey Suits.Gentlemen\u2019s White Vests,.$1.35 upwards.Gentlemen's Alpaca Coats,.$1.50 upwards.Gentlemen\u2019s Tweed Suits,.$8.00 upwards.Gentlemen's Spun Silk and Summer M.eriro Underclothing, Spun Silk and Merino Hosiery, Socks, Braces, Ties, Scarfs, Shirts, English Collars, Umbrellas, &c.GLOVER, FRY & CO.SUMMER GOODS AT- Greatly Reduced Prices I E S.J.SHAWM, St.John Street, Upper Town, and Sona-le-Fort Street, Lo ver Town, spoktshen WILL FIND AT THE ST.JOHN STREET STORE m ncluding something extra m RODS for SALMON and TBOUT, \u2014AN 1>\u2014 Without exception the Largest anu Best Stock of ARTIFICIAL FLIES 11 For Salmon and Trout in Quebec.CALL AND EXAMINE.Hats for theHot Weather JUST RECEIVED, ÜIRBCT FROM tf Paris : EXTRA LIBHT SOFT FEENOH FELTS 2 CASES PITH HELMETS ! Straws, Brazils, Leghorns ! SEA-SIDE HATS I ALL THE LATEST NOVELTIES ! ar The largest assortment in the City at tha LOWEST PRICES.G.R.RENFREW & CO.' SA, BFADE STREET.June 26, 1382.None Gennine Unless Labelled iiu u , Homs and Export Bottlers of Ales, Porter, Lager Beer and other Beverages, 30 St.Charles and 4 Bath Streets.MOLSON\u2019S India Pale Ales & XXX Porter.CARLING\u2019S Amber Ales, Porter & Half & Half.M CARTHY\u2019S India Palo Mild Alee & Porter.FLETCHER\u2019S India Pale XX & XXX Ales.REINHARDT\u2019S Lager and other Ales.I respectfully call the attention of the Trade Country Store* and Private Families to this\u2019 the LATtOKST STOCK of Malt Liquors ami other Beverages held by any Bottler in the Dominion.Orders promptly delivered in Town and Country.Chscquea and remittances payable to M»y 31, 1&82.W.WATSON.2STOTICE.|\\/ni T.DOMBROUSKI BEGS leave -LtJ.to inform his customers, and the public generally, that he is not in partnership with anyone, and still carries on business at his Old Stand, CHAMPLAIN MARKET HALL, Nos.16 and 17, where he has always on hand a very large stook of Fresh and Salt Pork, Hams.Bacon, Sausages, Butter, Lard, Kggs, &c., at the very lowest prices.March 10.1882.\tFm-p ^ot%'uV,Es ijll «X- SEq * t6»,p WARRANTED PURE V THIS RICH BLACK SILK IS FOR DRESSES AND MANTLES AND CAN BE HAD FROM ALL LEADING RETAIL DRY GOODS HOUSES _May 3, 1882.\t Cm-p Fire ! Fire l!\tT-A-ilokiin-g- i ANTLES, JACKETS, DRESSES, MORNING WRAPPERS, TRIMMED HATS and BONNETS, UNTRIMMED HATS, PARASOLS, SUNSHADES.Some great bargains in the above, and a variety of other goods, are now being offered 50 Pcs.Dress Materials, from 9cts.to 25cts.per yard.GLOVER, FRY & CO.July 11.18-sa._____ ANTIQUE WATCHES A SILVER CASED POCKET CHRO-nometer, manufactured by Jno.Arnold London.A Gold Cased Quarter-Hour Re, P«*ter, manufactured by Leroy & Fils, Paris, Also,\u2014An 18-Carat Gold Snuffbox, manufactured in London, 1815.At G.SEIFERT\u2019S European Bazaar, __________ 12, Fabrique Street.FIELD J2AMES~r~ Lawn Tennis, Croquet & Badminton, Last Season's Stock, at Reduced Prices, at D.SEIFERT\u2019S EUROPEAN BAZAAR, June 12.1882 Having attended the recent Sale in Montreal, and having been fortunate in procuring several cheap lines of STAPLE GOODS 1 not damaged, we will offer them for sale from to-morrow At Greatly Reduced Prices Our customers and the public are invited to inspect the above.\u2014ALSO\u2014 The balance of our Summer Goods at Lowered Prices.Gentlemen\u2019s Department.BY THIS WEEK\u2019S STEAMER we have received the Latest Styles in Shirts, Collars, Handkerchiefs and Ties, Summer Underclothing all sizes, Silk Hose, etc.FYFE & LEITCH, CORNER FARRIQUE ST.& HOPE NHL July 4, 1882.\tjnl2-Lm Woollen Department.Gentlemen will always find a tine selec tion of English and Scotch Tweeds, French Suitings, Serges and Cheviots, Pan-taioonings, Worsted Coatings, W\u2019est of England Broad Waded Doe, &e., Ac.QUEBEC 0UTFITTIN6 EMPORIUM, ' 47, BUADE ST., 47, UPPER town.BURTON & CLEMENT, MERCHANT TAILORS AKn HABERDASHERS.Gentlemen's Fomishiogs.WHITE and COLORED Shirts, Collais and Cuffs, Undershirts and Drawers, Ties and Handkerchiefs, Socks and Gaiters, Bathing Towels, White Vests, Leather Travelling Valises, &c., Ac.All our Garments are made on the premises under our personal supervision, and only First-Class and Experienced Workmen employed, so that we are in a position to guarantee jierfect satisfaction as to fit and finish to those who may faver us with their orders.July 17, 1882.TH E CHEAP Barim aid Piston Me -STOiRZHI OJB'- ANDREWS BROTHERS, to.late TH08.ANDREWS.TIuGaTgjJMscennnjiri^M^ 1200 \u2018Qoeen\u2019Oil Stoves IN DAILY USE IN QUEBEC ALONE.Everybody delighted with them.Tho present coat of a Cord of Wood will buy and maintain an OIL STOVE for the season.\u2019 SOLE AGENCY AT TheAstral Oil Depot, 56, Fabrique St.July 20, 1882.is given for Casii ! TO SPORTSMEN ! Something very nest in Salmon and Trent Rods ! Casting Lines, Landing Nets, Spoon Halts, Keels, écc.FLIESIFLIESIFLIESI The best Assortment in the CRy.A large Assortment of KBFRIOBRA70M, PILIERS, ICE CREAM FREEZERS, and General HOUSE-FURNISHING GOODS.We also undertake all orders for PLUMBIVC^AS^FITTINC^OOF'MC^IH, BRASS ANOCOPPeTwORkT^\"\" Special Attention^ gi ventotheHssting of Building^vitl^Ho^Vatwv Having, in all these Branches of tbs Trade, an efficient staff of workmen we can guarantee our customers every aatisfsction.No.1, ST.JOHN STREET.May 27.1882 febl STRAW HATS! I AM NOW OFFERING THE BALANCE of my STRAW GOODS At » GREAT REDUCTION, in ont» to reduce stock.\u2014AMO\u2014 LIGHT FELT HATS AT LOW FIGURES I James C.Paterson.July 18, 1882.aSTE-W SPfiiG ni SOMMES GOODS WE BEG TO INFORM OUR NUME-roua Customers, and tbs Public, that we have now opened the whole of our large SPRING IMPORTATIONS ! and would request particular attention to tha undermentioned, which will be found to oon-sist of the Leading Novelties of the season.Frillingu, in Lisse and India Muslin Lace and Beaded Fichus.Black, Cream, and FiceUe Laces.New Bonnets and Bonnet Ornaments.Black Beaded Gimps, a large assortment.Black Beaded Ornaments.Silk, Beaded, and New Metal Buttons Black Fringes, Watered and Chenille.Straw Hats and Bonnets.Flowers and Roses, a choies selection.Feathers, in all the leading Colors.Plain and Broche Satteens.New Prints, Plain and Fancy.New Dress Goods.\u2022 Ladies\u2019 Neck Ties and Square*, Ac., Ac.We are also showing Cheap.Lines in Tapestry Carpets, from 46cts.upwards, and a choice assortment of Wool Bed- 'Koom Carpets.DAVIDSON & HORAN May 24, 188?,.This Department will be found complete with all the LATEST NOVELTIES in the market.apllOFm-bo Tailor to His Excellency the Governor-Geneml.SUMMER, 1882.OENIXEMEN,- MY STOCK FOR THE COMING H£A-son comprises a large and OHOffCK SELECTION of tha moat FASHIONABLE CLOTHS to be found in the European markets.ID.3VEOK/Ca-^.2Sr, 34, Farkiqi e Street, June 21 1882.eblTOl Lm Quebec Board of Trade.The quarterly general meet- ing ef the Members of the Corporation of the QUEBEC BOARD OF TRADE will be held at the Board Room, on WEDNESDAY, the aid day of AUGUST NEXT, at 2.80 o\u2019clock P.M., for the transaction of general business.Quebec.V6th July, 1882.F.H.ANDREWS, Secretary.July 25, 1882.\t__________A DAILY EXPECTED Ex Barqus \u201cHope,\u201d from Liverpool : 407 T0coalEST W1(iAN steam For sale by WILSON A CO.July 25, 1882.\tBp E.B.EDDY\u2019S IPJLILS, TXT IBS, WAS H-BO ARD S, -AJSTI3 PARLOR AND SULPHUR MATCHES FOR SALE BY F.H.ANDREWS & SON.Leather and Rubber Belting, Patent Laee Leather, Lubricating Oils of all grades, the Largest laftortment in the City.\t/;\t\u2022\u2019 June 19, 1882.mmm trmtii i lost.Cures Disease by Application of Pads.Has stood the test of many years and many thousands who were omsidsred .beyond all cure, now rejoice in a renewed lease ot health and strength.Pads of all descriptions, and advios razz, at the Queter Agency, 31, ST.STABISLAUS STfilET, lately occupied by P.CUMMINS, Veterinary Surgeon.Regular Liver Pads.$2.00.Special do.$3.00.Lung Pads.$3.50.Kidney Pads.$3.00.Absorptive Plasters.60cts.Absorption Baths 25cta.each, for Colds, Fevers, Ac.Send for Pamphlet.July 26.1883.\tCm Copying Press ! WANTED TO PURCHASE, A LARGE sized COPYING PRESS, Cheap.Apply AT THIS OFFICE, July 25, 1882.\tC Nurse Wanted, ^yiTH SOME EXPERIENCE.Apply at B\u2019K.OF B.N.A, Peter Street, Between the hours of 10 and 3.July 25, 1882.\ttf ON SUNDAY EVENING, A GOLD DOUBLE-SLEEVE LINK, -Engraved Arm Embowed holding a Sword.Return to 65, D AIGUILLON STREET and get reward.July 26, 1882.\ttf LOST, IN LOWER TOWN, A LITTLE DOG, Black and Tan, answering to the name of \u201cBeauty,\u201d and bearing a Collar with the name of DR.F.Ç.ROY.A reward will be given.July 25, 1882.\tB LOST, ON SATURDAY, ON CHAMPLAIN OR Notre Dame Streets, A PAIR OF GOLD SPECTACLES AND CASE.Finder will be rewarded on leaving at This Office, or with the undersigned.E.H.TAYLOR, 716, Champlain Street.July 25, 1882.\tAp Quebec Humane Society.A PUBLIC MEETING WILL BE HELD in Association Rooms, St.John's Gate, on THURSDAY, 27th instant, at 8 P M., to promote the objects of the above Society in protecting the lives of citizens and strangers from drowning\u2014tbs granting honorary rewards in cases of courageous rescue\u2014and also to consider tha desirability of obtaining hivh patronage for the Society in its important work.A large attendance is requested, and the presence of prominent citizens will be esteemed.WILLIAM MARS DEN, M.D., President, Quebec Humane Society.July 24, 1882.\tD EXCLUSION TO LAKE ST.JOSEPH.Quebec&LakeSUohfl Railway A SPECIAL TRAIN WILL LEAVE the Palais Station, for Lake St.Joseph, on WEDNESDAY, the 26th instant, at 1.45 P.M., punctually, connecting with Steamer \u201cSt.Joseph,\u201d for a trip around the Lake.Re turning, will arrive at Quebec at 9.40 P.M.Return Tickets at Single First-Class Fare Children half-price.Steamboat fare 25 oents each.J.G.3GGTT, Sec\u2019y.A Manager.July 25, 1882.\tB TAPISSIER FRERES\u2019 GREASE PROOF SILK The dye of these silks is put up through a special process, which extractn all greasy substance and renders the material softer and more durable than the qualities hitherto produced.Some shininess, after good wear, is absolutely unavoidable, being incidental to all materials made of twisted yarn, whether in wool, cotton, or silk, but this make, being free from all oily substance, is only liable to the shininees caused by fristion, and good wear is guaranteed.TAPISSUR FRERES\u2019 GREASE PROOF SILK.\"The Queen.'' and \"WAdon's Journal\" says \u2014 \u201cThis silk gives every satisfaction, both as to richness, durability and price, it being a special make, free from deleterious compositions.\u201d Messrs.Tapissier Freres will replace any length complained of as not fulfilling the advantages claimed.Demand with each purchase the blue ticket guaranteeing wear.July 25, 1882._ZDt.th&aatAFw Wanted to Charter ^ VESSEL OF ABOUT 400 to 425 Tons, for a trie port in France.Apply to July 25, 1883.WILSON A CO.BP ZtsTOTIOIE.The owners of the Swedish Bark \u201cPHCENIX\u201d will not pay any,debts what ever contracted by the Crew while in the Port of Quebec.CAR l.AUG HAGGDAHL, Master.July 25, 1882.\tC TsTOTIOLl.July 26, 1882.rn H E UNDERSIGNED X will not be responsible for any debts contracted for by the Crew of the Bark \u201c PETRA,\" without a written order signed by himself.M.FALKENBERG, Master.Bp FOR SALE, >f> That splendid property con- taming over 1200 arpents, almost all of good farming lands, situate at River-du-Loup (en bas), called \u201cLa Pointe,\u201d where stop the steamboats going to the Saguenay and which is the present terminus of the Woodstock and River-du-Loup Railway, shall be sold by licitation at the Court House of Kamouraska, dur ing the sitting of the Court, on the first day of September next, et ten o'clock, A.M.It is a fine opportunity for capitalists to make fair profits.For further particulars, apply to the undersigned, at River-du-Lcup (en baa), Province of Quebec.J.ELZEAR POULIOT, Attorney for the co-hein.July 24, 1882._____\u2019_______R__ To BoMorc oi CoiMorc.The undersigned will receive Tenders up to the Twentieth day of August neit, -FOR THE- Construction of an Opera House at Sherbrooke, P.Q.Plana, etc., may be seen at our Office here, and also at the Office of W.T.THOMAS, Architect, 286, St.Jambs Street, Montreal We do not bind ourselves to accept the lowest or any tender.Sherbrooke, July 3L 1883.IVES A BROWN.July 34.1882.\t\u2018\tC O.T.R.FERRY.On and after the 24th instant, the Ferry Stessner will QUEBEC.AM.6.45 Express to Halifax and Mixed to Richmond.10,30 Mail to River du Loup.1S.*1» Ex press to Montreal and Island Pond.P.M.6.45 Market Train to River du Loup.8.00 Mail to tbs West On Saturdays Only.12.30-English Mail to Rimouski aod Special to Petite Metis.LEW STATION.AM.5.00 Market Train.7.00 Mail from the West.P.M.1.20 Mi zed frem River du Loup and Express from Montreal.3.00Mized from Richmond.7-OOMixed from Richmond.8.35 Express from Halifax.On Mondays Only.8.00 Special from Petite Metis.m Intermediate Tripe for Freight July 24, 1883.0 u THE MORKINÛ CHRONICLE, TUESDAY, JULY 25/ 1882.SHIPPING.ENTERED FOR LOADING.July 34\u2014Got LwiRdon.1127, Liverpool, John Burxtall A co, H&ll\u2019a booms.PTob*büiti*a fer tlM K«»t 34 B*on fcr ttl\tR°v, 6W, Diopjio, Benson Bros k co, Cap St.Lawrence, etc., etc Tosonto, July 35, 1, a.tu.\u2014St.Lawrence\u2014 L'pp»r and Lower portione\u2014Moderate to freeh scuùi weeUrly to eoutberly winds and fine hot Roune.Golf\u2014Moderate weet to soutbi very large numbers restore the ravages of by using the famous Cingalese Hur Rene war.Sold as Ô0 cents per b >ctle by all druggists.\td&w Compromise.\u2014Mr.J.C.Paterson, hatter and furrier of this city, has secured a settlement with his creditors at 25 cents in the dollar, secured, payable in four, eight and twelve months.Good Flshing.\u2014The Governor-Genertl and the Princess Louise seem to have been favored during their late visit to the river Caacapedia.Iq ten days the V'iceregal party lan Jea 76 salmon, weighing 26 to 33 pounds apiece.Arrested.\u2014Seven or eight young boys, aged from 10 to 12 years, hare been arrested for robbery of old material on the line of the Grand Trunk Railway.Aug.Bourque has been also arrested, charged with purenasing the property stolen.Fi&e at Somb&sst.\u2014On Thursday last, a fire reduced to ashes the saw and grist mill of Mr.Orner Gagne, in the village of St.Julie de Somerset.There was a small insurance on the property in the Joliette Mutual Assurance Company.Nothing but a sudden change of the wind saved the entire village from destruction.*\u2019 It is necessary during hot weather to avoid beverages likely to beat or stimulate the system.Cocoa, deprived of the superfluom fat, and guaranteed absolutely pure, is a most soothing, sustaining, and refreshing beverage.Be sure that you get Cadbury\u2019s Cocoa Essence wbeu you ask for it, as imitations are often pusnei by shop-keepers for the sake of extra profit.\u201d\tjn26Lma&w New Gold Mining Company.\u2014A new Gold Mining Company, under the name of the Grenville Mining Company, with a capital of $500.000, for the purpose of gold mining on the Gilbert River, iu the county of Beauce, ha* been formed.Eiastus Feutoo, is President of the new company, and Messrs.Ralph Weir, James Quinn, VV.C.Dunwoodie and George D.Weir, are the directors.A shaft has been sunk on the property eighty feet deep and the directors are very jubilant with ?he gold prospect that was found at the lottom.They intend working on a large 8udden Death.\u2014Yesterday evening about 7.30 o\u2019clock, Patrick Cook, a well-known driver of the Quebec Street Railway Company, bad pat in his car after bis day\u2019s work and sat down outside the building to bave a smoke.He got up, telling one of the stablemen that he bad token a pain in his chest, and went home\u2014only a few perches distant from the stables\u2014sat down on a chair and in less than 15 minutes after.was carried into bis house a corpse.P.Cook was in the employment of the company since its commencement, and was an honest, faithful servant and well-known to many of the citizens of Quebec.W ben all with one accord give spontaneous testimony in favor of 8C.Jacob\u2019s Oil, we snow that its virtues ate such as to merit it, and we are heartily glad of the generosity wbich does not heel Late to give a good article its due meed of praise.Mr.William Hadeler, at the Marathon Hotel, Wausau, Win., relates the fallowing experience : Some time since, «aid Mr.H., I took a severe cold, * hicb settled in my limbe, and gradually developed into a bad case of rheumatism.Aft^r suffering for some time, \u2022od using many different preparations (among which was a remedy prescribed by a physician) \u2014all without receiving any benefit whatever, a friend advised me to try 3t.Jacob's Uü.I aid so expecting to receive but little benefit, and wan considerably surprised to feel somewhat easier after the first application.The use of only one-third of a bottle perfectly cured me.krum a state of complete Helplessness, I am now just as strong and bealtny as ever, aod gladly give all the praise to that wonderful remedy, St.Jacob\u2019s UiL WHAT IS LARDiNE Î Just try it any you will be convinced that it is the only Machine Oil in the marJcet which will we* equal to Castor Oil and yet will not gum or clog your machinery.Farmers, Three era, ana Mill a en from all parts of Ontario can testify as to its ment».It has been victorious at ah the great Ex bitions aod industrial Fairs ince 1876, carrying off the First Prizes and Mortals in every instance.Facto speak loudei than words, and the public can find out that tne foregoing assertions are true by trying one sample lot of Lardixe, for sale by local dealer», manufactured solely by McGoll Broh.Sl Co., Toronto, For sale in Quebec ny F.H.Andrew» A Son, and Jesse Joseph, junr US3T* cojcroar io maormuNG \u2022'Brown s Household Panacea \u201d has no equal for relieving pain, both internal and external.It cures Pain in the Side, Back or Bowels, Son Throat, Rheumatism, Toothache Lumbago ano any kind of a Pain or Ache.\"Ik will most surety quicken the Blood and Heal, as its actin* power is wonderful.\"Brown sHousehold Panacea,\" being acknowledged as the great Pain Itahever, and of double the strength of any other Kinir or Liniment in the world, should be in every family handy for use when want ,M as it really is the best remedy n the world or Oram pa in the Stomach, and Pains ano Aobae of all kinds, and is for sals by all Dru# J gists at tt cento a bottl January 81.1883\tLm-d&w MOTHERS I MOTHjuixo 11 MOTHERS ! ! ! Are you disturbed at night and br keno* wear rest by a t»\"* **»fd suffering and cryirg with he excruciating painM catting teeth?li ¦q go at oooa and get a bottle of MBS.W INS-jjjrf a tHJOTHUSG SYRUP.It will relie -the poor little sufferer immediately\u2014depei d upon it there is no mistake about it.Th*re is out a \u2022 on earth who has ever used it woo will net tell you at once that it will regu-b*, the bowels, and give rest to the mother, and relief and health to the child, operating like magic.It u perfectly safe to use ui all cases, and pleasant to the teste, and is the prescription \u2022>f one of the oldest and ben female physicians' aid nurses in the United States.Sold every where at 25 cento a bottle.January 31.188S.\tm dAw General Skobeleff predicted that he should never be an old man, and always put on his beet uniform when he went into battle, believing he should not come out alive.Delays are dangerous, particularly in Kidnye Disease, so taka at once Dr.Van Boren\u20198 K/d- ^ y°,ir y.Your Druggist keeps t».> dAw ResimeHial Honors.\" LOUISBOURG \u201d AND \" QUEBEC1 ADDED TO THE COLORS OF VARIOUS REGIMENTS.In consequence of the report of a committee appointed last year to consider the claims of certain regiments to honorary distinctions arising out of their participation in some of the victories of the last century, a considerable number of these corps has been authorized to bear in their respective colors and appointments the names of Marlborough\u2019s battles, THE BATTLE OF LOUISBUBG, AND WOLFE1» VICTORY AT QUEBEC in 1759.The names of \"Blenheim,\u201d \"Ram-illies,\u201d \"Oudenarde\u201d aod \"Malplaqnet\u201d will accordingly be done on the colors and appointments of the following regiments :\u2014 King\u2019s Dragoon Guards.| 3rd, 5th, 6ta.and Dragoon Guards.The Scots Greys.The Fifth Lancers.Tae Grenadier Guards.The Royal Scots.The Buffs.Liverpool (8th) Regiment.Lincolnshire (10th) Regiment.Eat Yorkshire (15th) Regiment.Bedfordshire (16th) Regiment.Royal Irish (18th) .Regiment.Royal Scots Fusiliers (21st).Royal Welsh Fusiliers (23rd).South Wales Borderers (24th).Scottish Rifles (26thj.The Hampshire (37th) Regiment.The Coldstream Guards are to bear the name of \"Oudenarde\u201d and \"Malplaquet,\u201d and the Gloucester (2Sth) Regiment, and the Worcester (29th) Regiment, are to bear that of \"Ramillies\u201d respectively.The following regiments were authorized to incribe \u201clouisburg\u201d AND \"QUEBEC, 1759.\u201d upon their colours :\u2014 The East Yorkshire (15th), The Gloucester (28th).The Royal Sussex (35th).The North Lancashire (47th), The Northamptonshire (48th), and The King\u2019s Royal Rifles (60th).The Royal Scots, Leicestershire, Cheshire, Soath Lancashire, and Sherwood Foresters are to bear the name of \"Louisburg,\u201d and the Oxfordshire that of \"Quebec, 1759.\u201d Of the above regiments the 7th Dragoon Guards, 5th Lancers, and Bedfordshire had hitherto been WITHOUT ANY DECORATION COMMEMORATIVE OF ACTIVE SERVICE, and the 21st Hussars will now be the only regiment in the army without such a distinction.Of the cavalry regiments, the 16th Lancers have the largest number of battles (thirteen) on their standards.Of the infantry regiments, the King\u2019s Rifles (60tb) head the list with twenty-nine achievements, and the Rifle Brigade follow next with twenty-six.The Royal Soots, the Gloucester, and the Dublin Fusiliers have twenty-five each ; the Royal Welsh Fusiliers, Soath Staffordshire, Sooth Lancashire, and Highland Light Infantry have twenty-three each ; the Snerwood Korea tern twenty-one, and the Gordon Highlanders twenty.\u2014Broad Arrow.The CollteUn In the Sound.ONE PARTY INSISTING THAT THE OTHER WAS TO BLAME-STEAMBOAT MEN\u2019S OPINIONS.The wrecked vessels from the collision in Long Island Sound lay in their docks yesterday morning while gangs of workmen were busy sbiftiug cargo from them.The passengers who started lor Halifax in the steamboat \"Alhambra\u201d had the passage money refunded.The freight will go by the \"Ciuiima\u201d a week hence.No passengers were sent up by the Providence direct line on Wednesday evening, but instead they were sent by the Fall River line.The \"Massachusetts\u201d made her regular tnp last evening, and to-night an extra steamboat (not yet selected) will go upon the line.Yesterday afternoon the \u2022Rhode Island\u201d was towed to the Delamater Iron Works, where the great derricks will be brought into play lifting the loose end of the massive paddle shaft, while a new guard timber and \"A\u201d frame are built.As soon a this is done the engine will begin working and the boat will go again to her place on the line, leaving tbe repair of the flimsy joiner work of the upper deck to be completed while the boat is going to and fro on her trip.The captains each insist upon the version that was given yesterday.Captain Farquhar, of the \"Alhambra,\u201d said that the \"Rhode Island\u201d attempted to cross his vessel\u2019s bows and miscalculated the distance and got caught.He continued :\u2014\"Tbe blowing of one whistle as a signal was of no consequence, as tbe steamers were then too close together to escape collision.My pilot is a regular commissioned officer, with his certificate from the Board of Admiralty in the Dominion.He saw everything plainly, and was keeping the \"Rhode Island\u201d to his right as he went eastward along the Sound, he even veered off half a point to the north, and it was not until the red light of tbe \"Rhode Island\u201d appeared that my pilot was aware that the approaching steamer had changed her course.Tnen the whistle came and immediately the collision.The short interval of time is shown by tbe testimony of a witness on the \"Rhode Island,\u201d who said he had not time to raise the window of his stateroom after hearing the whistles before tbe crash came.There will be no difficulty in getting evidence to show that we were right and that the blame is upon the man at tbe wheel of the \"Rhode Island.\u201d LEGAL PROCEEDINGS.The agent of the Quebec Steamship Company, the owners of the \u2018'Alhambra,\u201d said that he had instructed counsel to proceed in the Courts.\"We intend that the \u2018Rhode Island\u2019 people shall pay for tne damage they have done us in this matter, a they were certainly to blame in their hazardous proceeding of crossing our bow at anch a short distance.I am afraid the pilots of some of these quick shoal water boats get over confident with their boats.The damage to the \u2018Alhambra\u2019 may run up to $10,000, but we can\u2019t tell till we get below the water line on the stem.\u201d The owners of tbe \"Rhode Island\u201d weye the first to reach the Courts, and yesterdky appeared in the United States Circuit Coure and opened an action in admiralty for $40,-000, more or less.The story of the accident was repeated in affidavit and five violations of the rules of navigation on the part of the officers of tbe \"Alhambra\u201d were recited.A monition was issued and a marshal was sent down to seize tbe \"Alhambra.\u201d Old steamboat men and pilots, who beard the stories of those who saw the collision, express the opinion that Pilot Dennis, of the \"Rhode Island,\u201d delayed the blowing of his whistle until too late.\"If,\u201d they say, \"the \u2018Rhode Island\u2019 saw and displayed red lights only there was ao necessity for the signal of OQe whittle, and with- the vessels able to sight each ^ther for five miles apart, if green lights were seen tbe signal should have been given while there was time to make the transfer from one tack to the other.\u201d\u2014New York Herald, July 21.An Anxious Capitalist.\"I came to ask,\u201d began a little old man in a whisper, looking as u fearful of being over heard, and drawing his chair close up to the editor, \"if you know anything of the condition of the Nevada Bank f\u201d \"No special information,\u201d replied the editor.\"Then you think it solvent\u2014perfectly solvent ?\u201d demanded the little man with intense eagerness.\u2018\u2018Certainly.\u201d \"Might I ask what tbe capital is\u2014it\u2019s paid up capital ?\" \"Three millions, I believe,\u201d said the editor beginning to wonder what manner of man had floated against him.\"And,\u201d continued tha man in black, tug ing nervous excitement at his thin and btras-gling iron gre^ beard, \"what\u2019s the Nevada Bank\u2019s reserve\u2014its reserve\u2014that\u2019s what I want to find out f \"Four millions, 1 think.\u201d \u201cAnd how is it invested\u2014how is it invested ?\u201d He fairly gulped with eagerness as he glued his eyes upon those of the editor and awaited the reply.\"In United States bonds.\u201d Wlth a sigh of relief.\"I m glad of that.Then\u201d\u2014here he looked all round to make sure that there were no listeners \"then you think a man could safely intrust his money to it?\u201d \u201cWhy, certainly.There\u2019s no safer bank in the world.It has unlimited backing.\u201d The little old man chuckled and took the editor\u2019s hand, which he shook almost gleefully.\u2022\u2022 ï ou have done me a great favor, sir,\u201d he exclaimed, \"a great favor\u2014and I shall not forget it !\u201d \"It bothers you\"to be sure that) your money is sate,»! suppose, sir ?\u201d said the editor, with that respect in tone and manner which every indepeodent citizen instinctively assumes when addressing a wealthy man.\"Weil\u2014er\u2014no, not just yet.The fact is,\u201d he cried, with a buret of confidence, \"I\u2019m about to change my manner of life.I\u2019m 55 to-day, and have foimed a resolution that henseforth X shall save my money instead of spending it, as I have done from my youth up, and X have suffered considerable anxiety about where to put my money when I get it.la point of fact, he went on his cadaverous face beaming, \"I am just now excessively hard up, and if you could oblige me, sir» with the loan of a dollar until I am started on my new career, you would lay me under a heavy obligation.\u201d The editor staggered toward the club in the corner, but when he turned he was alone.\u2014 Virginia CUy (Nev) Chronicle.Wife Wanted.The following unique epistle was received by the officials of Castle Garden on Tuesday : Addressed most full of respect and humbleness to the very distinguished Commissarys of Emmigration in the town of New Y ork, United States.St.Paul, Minn., July 3, 1882.Respected Gentlemens : Three years ago I arifed in United States, at Castle Garden.I was most kind treated bei the gentlemens in the garden which send me to Minesoto to an employment and I mad monney a great deal, now I haf a store and a horrae and waggon only I haf not a wife and I most respectedly ask the Commissarys to send me a wife from Scandinavia.A Sweden girll or a Norway girll I want but a Dane girl I do not love because Danish language I do not speek well.Monney she must half a little, and also dress and boots and mantel, because clotbings are very dear in Minnesota.I do not want a girl of more age a* twenty-five, and she must haf no father or muderwith her.Will theCommissarys, respectedly I ask, gif me .a girl like thiss and send her to mein St.Paul, Minnesota.My uame is John Olsen.Address, 212 Grand streak St.Paul.Proclaim it far and wide that Dr.VanBruens Kidney Curs not only immediately relieves all kidney diseases, but what is more important to the unfortunate sufferer, will ultimately cure him effectually ;\tdAw Eight hundred societies with their banners, leaking a procession that was two hours in passing a given point, assisted at the late un* veiling of the monument to Mazzina at Genoa.After many yean of patient investigation Dr Van Boren, of Germany, finally succeeded in penecüng a Kidney Cure that would perma-ently relieve all cases of Kidney Disease.Be sure and ask^your Druggist for Dr.Van Boren\u2019s idney Cure\taAw John Morley is to be succeeded by Mr.T, H.S.Escott on the Fortnvjhtly Bevieie.All tbe People of the Dominion of Canada are Concerned.Here are some more of the many hundreds, of the leading people in the Dominion of Canada who have been cured of Catarrh, Bronchitis, Asthma and Lung Disease by Dr.Souvielle'S Spirometer an instrument, which conveys medicinal properties direct to the seat of the disease.Read and judge for yourself -,\u2018\u2018Several o* my famdy and friends have been cured of bronchitis, asthma, and catarrh by using tbe Spirometer.\u201d John P.Whelan, Man- Ser of the Pott and True Witneu, Montreal, r.C.Hill, Montreal, catarrh and bronchitis.Mr DeBourherville, of ttie Indian Department, Ottawa, catarrh of many yean ; now curecU Mr.Geo.Ager, Ottawa, catarrh and lung disease ; cured.Mrs Smith, London, wife of Medic-.! Detective, cured of catarrh.Geo.Ma guire, Toronto.482, Adelaide street West i daughter cured of astJma.Geo.Willis, Exeter, Ont., catarrh and bronchitis.J.B, Armstrong, 186, Yonire street, Toronto, catarrh and catarrhal deafness.Thomas Telfer, 12, Melinda street, Toronto asthma cured.Mi Benj.A.Drake, St.Urbain street, Montreal, iot many years suffering from bronchitis and asthma, is now cured.Also, the no lees surprising cure of Mrs.Benoit, 114, Cathedral street, daughter of Mrs.David Perrault, who suffered from asthma and bronchitis for over eight years, and who is nou( perfectly cured.Mrs; Anderson, of Belleville, cured of bronchitis, and her sister cured of bronchitis and lung disease.I have no hesitation is saying Dr.Souvielle\u2019s Spirometer will cure catarrh and bronchitis.John C.Fleming, Editor of Potl a§d True Wit-£«.1, Montreal.The above is sufficient to convince the public of the merits of the Spirometer.The in.tni ment will be expressed to any address.Call or write, enclosing stamp, to M.Sou-vielle, ex-Aide-Surgeon of French army, 13, Phillips Square, Montreal Phys-cians and suf ferera can try it free June 15, 1882)\tLm dAw It cannot be said that St.Jacob\u2019s Oil, thq Great German Remedy, is ever demonstrative over a cose of rheumatism : quietly he performs h's mission, leaving the relieved ons to tell of its result.Mr.Carl Siegmund, cor.Congress and Washington sts., Ypsilami, Michigan, writes My daughter had suffeied from rheumatism to such an extent that it cripuled her, rendering her unable to walk at all.We coo salted many physicians and used all kinds of medicines, but in vain.At last we decided t< > try the St.Jacob\u2019s Oil, and this wonderful re znedy effected the happiest results.It cured my daughter and the little girl is now well and strong.Such facto, plain and incontrovertiole, are always in order and are convincing ; and it gives us no small pleasure to add our endorsement of the article which has accomplished such results.TO OWNERS OF HORSES.It U a well attested fact confirmed by the ex- Fjrience of thousands that \"Darley\u2019s Condition owders and Arabian Heave Remedy \u201d for horses is superior to anything of tbe kind now or eJer known.We know that it has been used in many cases where the horse has bsen considered almost worthless, with the most satisfactory result, the horse having been restored to perfect soundness or so much benelitted that the complaint cmld scarcely be observed.Many such horses have afterwards been sold for from $5u to $100 more than they would have previously brought, and were well worth the difference ; let all interested consider this.Remember the name and see that tbe 8 (mature of Hurd A Co.is on each package.Nor throp A Lyman, Toronto, Ont., Proprietor for Canada.Sold by all MetPeine Dealers.July 22.1882.\tJra-d&w The Great Female Kemedy.JOB MOSES' PILLS.This invaluable medicine is unfailing in tbs euro of all those painful and dangerous disorders to which the Female constitution is subject.It nvigoratas the debilitated and delicate ; and by regulating and strengthening the ystem, fortifies the youthful constitution tor the duties of life, and when taken in middle or old age, proves e real blessing, end on the approach of Child-birth these Puls should be used for two or throe weeks previous to confinement ; the benefits: be derived are incalculable : they fortify tbe oonstita tioo.lessen the suffering during labor, prevent wearnwis of the organs, and enable tbe mother to perform her duties with comfort to berse f and child.In all cases of Nervous and Spinal Affections Pams in the Baek and Limbs, Fatigue in slight exgrfttoèC Palpitation of the Heart, Hysterics and Whites, these pills will effect e cure when ail other means here failed end although a pcnp^fnl remedy, do not contain ron, calomel antimony, or anything hurtful to the aonstitu tion.Sold by all Medicine Dealers.Ful directions in the pamphlet around each package.iOB MOSES, FEW YORK, tOU PROPRIETOR $1.00 and 6 cents for postage, enclosed to Northrop A Lyman, Toronto, Ont., general agents for the Dominion, will insure a bottle containing over 50 pills by r^rn mai).February 3,1882.\tJm-d&w Thousands Perish before tbe meridian of life Li reached, in consequence of disregarding lung disease in its earlier stage Consumption fastens its relentless grasp upon them while they do not even suspect its advent.Trifling or tampering with a cough will not answer.Delay, and unwisely chosen medicines both encourage it* progress.The proper course is to select a well-known and sterling remedy, and use it systematically at the outset.The best is Northrop A Lyman\u2019s Emulsion of C»d Liver Ud aud Hypophosphites of Lime and Soda.The value of cod liver oil as a pulmonic is too well kqewp to require comment.The hypo'-phosphites are specially useful for their invigorating properties, contributing to tbe development of muscular and fibrous tissue, both of which are greatly depleted aud weakened in cases of pulmonary decline.The bones are also strengthened by thoir use.This time-honored q>ecitic and tonic also possesses properties as a blood purifier, which render it valuable in cases of scrofula.Persons of weakly constitution derive from it a degree of vigor obtainable from no other source, and it has even proved itself a most efficient protection to those troubled with \u2022 hereditary tendency to the maladies it is adapted to prevent and relieve.As before intimated, its prompt use is particularly recommended.In a climate rigorous as our own, and where the summer is so fleeting, persons with weak chest and lungs are specially in need of a reliable medicinal safeguard.They will find none so well adapted to their wants as this thoroughly tested and highly approved article.Pr-pared by Northrop & Lyman, Toronto, and sold by all druggists.July 14,1882.\tJmdAw THE MORNING CHRONICLE.newcustoÉMariffi MACK\u2019S MAGNETIC MSDICUfT.Is a Sore, Prompt and Effectual Remedy for Nervous Debility in all tit stage*.Weak Memory.Lou of Brain Power, Prostration.Night Louts, Weakness, Impotcncy, and General Lou of Power.It repairs Nervous Waste, Bcjuvenaiet the JatLod IrXellect, Strengthens the Enfeebled Bram, and Restores Surprising Tone and > igor to the Exhausted Organs.The experience of thousands proves it an Invaluable Remedy The Modirino is pleasant to tbe tarte, and each box contains sufficient for two weeks\u2019 medication, and is the cheapest and best.\u2022¦'Full particulars in our pamphlet, which we desire to mail free to any address.Mack's Magnetic Medicine is sold by Druggists at 80cts.per box, or 12 boxes for $6, or wjll be mailed free of postage, on receipt of the money, by addressing MACKS MAGNETIC MEDICINE CO., Windsor, Ont, Canada.Sold in Quebec by LAROCHE & CO., Oppo site Poet Office, and J.J VELDON, 122, 8t, Joaepfc Street December 29,108\tLm d&w The terrific twinges endured by r >eumatism are first soothed and in tbe end permanently relieved by that beneficent annihilator of pain aad preventive of its return, FHoiiab\u2019 Ecttc-trio Oil.a combination of six patent medicinal oils, devoid of alcohol, and consequently non-,p \u2022y Full particulars in our pamphlet, which we desire to send free by mail to every one.\u2022WThe Specific Medicine is sold by all druggists at $1 per package, or six packages for $5, or will bo sent free by mail on receipt of the money by addressing\t_____ THC GRAY MEDICINE CO\u201e Toronto, Out., Canada.July 5, 1882.\tLmdAw FOR THE BEST MIUHttfEST SHEET IRON ROOFING JOTT A CO.MONTKKAL, 4HJZBBU.July 17,1882.\tAm co-d&w LYMAN\u2019S STANDARD inks *( ¦ APPROVED and USED by the \u2022 # / \u2019 »\t»f » *.I \u2022 r Bank of Montreal, tne Grand Trunk Railway, The Leading Newspaper Offices and the Mercantile Establishments \u2014 AND \u2014 THE PUBLIC SCHOOLS.June 24, 1882.\tfeb8Lm-co Mian Pacific Railway Company.THE CANADIAN PACIFIC RAILWAY COMPANY offer lands in the Fertile Belt of Manitoba and the Northwert Territory for sale, on certain conditions ae to cultivation, $2.50 PER ACRE.Payment to be made one-sixth at time of pur chase, and the Gal*nee in five annual instal ments with interest at Six per cent.A REBATE OF $1.25 PER ACRE.being allowed for cultivation, as described in the Company\u2019s Land Regulations.THB LAND GRANT BONDS of the Company, which can be procured at all agencies of the Bank of Montreal and other Banking institutions throughout the country will be RECEIVED AT TEN PER GENT.PREMIUM on their par value, with interest acçrued.on pieormat': of end ia Ipayment of the porehasd money, thus further reducing the price of the land to the purchaser.For oopiee of the Land Regulations and other particulars apply to the Company\u2019s Land Commissioner, JOHN MdTAVISH, Winnipeg ; or to the undersigned.By order of the Board, CHARLES DRINKWATER, Secretary.Montreal, May 19, 1882.Jufe 1(9, 1882.\tmay 22*4ocu ^COFFEE > CROP 3,880, FULLY MATURED tan, Fresh Med or taid ! i- PURE I JAMAICA GROUND COFFEE* 25c ts.EXTRA CHOICE COFFEE.30cta WATTER\u2019S MIXTURE (unsurpassed).35cts.Fre»h Roasted and Ground on tbe premises every morning.Unground 1c.per lb less than the above quoted prices.Remember tbe address,\u2014 TEA' AMD DOFfEE DEPOT, 22, FABRIQUE STREET, ¦A.WA-TTIEIR/S June 13,1882.R.BARDEN, A 1 -IMPORTER OF- FMJB AD vram, WHOLESALE AND RETAIL, 14 & IB, ST.PETER STREET.CONSTANTLY ON HAND ALL KINDS OF FRUIT AND Yiemummsoi! June8, 1882.\t; ^t^yl-p CANADIAN MS ! Tie Host Popular Canadian Sois, NINE IN NUMBER, -HAVE BEEN- Arranged for either Reed or Brass Bands, -BY- J.-VEZITSTA, (Bandmaster \"A\u201d Battery A 8th Royal Rifles.) ¦ - - - 02.00.And Published and for sale by A.LAVIGNE, MUSIC DEALER AND PUBLISHER, 55, Fabriq ue Street June 8, 1882.apl26Lan SCOTCH STEAM C0A1 FOR SALE.QAA mONSBESTWISHAW, OUU 1 ex \u201cThe Craigs.\u201d 600 Tons Best Wishaw, ex \u201cMa-theron.\u201d * 500 Tons Best Wishaw, ex \u201cDunrobin Castle.\u201d (In bond or duty paid.) John MacNaughton «fc Co., INDIA WHARF & 194 ST.PAUL TJ June 2, 1882» JUST PUBLISHED : CUSTOMS AND EXCISE TARIFF, with List of Warehousing Ports in the Dotnin ion, Sterliug Exchange, France, German Kixmarls, and the Principal Foreign Cur rencies at Canadian Customs value.\u2014ALSO\u2014 .Table of the value of Francs in English Money.For sale by DAWSON & CO.June 19,1882 INK, INK, INK.MESSRS.DAWSON & CO.HA VEJUST RECEIVED A fan supply of the following Inks i STEPHEN\u2019S BLUE-BLACK WRITING FLUID.Stephen\u2019s Blue-Black Copying Fluid, giving three copies immediately after writing.Akilyton Copyinu Ink will furnish severa perfect and equal copies, no matter how varying or how long the interval, of a powerful and intense black.Does not act upon the Pens.\t.it Cabtkr\u2019s combined Writing and Copying Ink.Davio\u2019s Inks.Antoine\u2019s Violette-Noir, suitable for ordinary Writing and will give one or two perfect Copies.Red Inks.\u2014Cochrane\u2019s Red Ink, Antoine's Scarlet Ink will give one copy and can be used with ordinary Steel Pens.Perth Ink.\u2014This old Established Ink still holds its rank as one of the most limpid and non-corrosive of anv in the Market.A stock of this Ink in all sizes always on hand.Copying Ink of the same brand, , for copying only.Ink Pencils, in all varieties.Markinu Ink of various makers, and indelible Pencils.Ink Powders.\u2014Todd\u2019s Perth Ink Powders, Lumsden\u2019s British Ink Powders.Ink Paper and Solid Ink, for Travellers\u2014 (soluble in water).Gteen, Blue, Violet, x ellow and other tints, sar Lithogram Ink.\u2014Red and Black.'OH FOR SALE got JNU ot to get.MUCILAGE.Dovell's Mucilage, Treasury Mucilage for Banks, Railroad and Office use.Also a supply of Stafford\u2019s Mucilage, a strong preparation of pure Gum Arabic\u2014has been the Standard Mucilage of the United States for twenty years, the strongest adhesive article ever made\u2014bright in color, very thick and will keep in any climate.India Rubber Mucilage Brushea.For sale by DAWSON St.OO., June 15th, 1882.TEAS! TEAS I NEW CROP 1883.WILL BE SOLD.BY AUCTION, AT the City of THREE RIVEbS.on Tuesday, .the 51ft September next, (if not previously diiqiosed of) the following belonging to Estate of B.BENNETT Sc.CO., Real Estate, viz.In the Cut of Three Rivers.Cadastral No.715.The vacant lot forming the corner of Rue du Fleure and St.Antoine Street», containing six thousand five hundred and twenty-five superficial feet, English measure (6,525).Cadastral No.727.The deep water wharf known as \u2018\u2018Quai.Gilmour,\u201d Rue du Fleure, oon-taining ten thousand two hundred and thirty-eight superficial feet English measure (10,238).Cadastral No.591.The lot on Rue du Fleure with Two Brick Houses, and yard and Sta lea in rear, The basement flat of one of three houses is fitted up aa an Office.Cadastral No.1,635.The large Wooden Frame Building, used as a Curling Rink, fronting on Deniverville Street, containing thirteen thousand and thirty-seven superficial teet, Eng Ush measure (13,037).Cadastral No.769.The vacant let fronting on Hart Street, containing four thousand one hundred and orty superficial feet, English measure (4,140 Cadastral No.2,13L The vacant lot forming the corner of Notre Dame and bt.Francois Xavier Streets.Cadastral No.586.The undivided half of a Beach and Deep Water Lot.Beach Lot contains 81,911 sup.ft.E.measure.Deep Water Lot \"\t48,615 do.do.Total.80,536 sup.ft.E.measure.In the Skionory of Cap di la Madelainb Mont Carmel.Ranges.St Flavian North Lois Nos.70, 78, and part of 79 and (80, about.180 arpents.St.Flavian South, Lots Nos.35, 99 and 100, containing about.199 St.Louis North, Lots Nos.28, 29, 30, 31, 82, 33, 34, 93, 97, 98, containing about.600\t\u2018 St.Louis' South, Lots Nos.28, 72, 97, £8, containing aoout.240\t\u201c St.Michael North, Lots Nos.L 2 8, 4, 6, «, 7, 52, 54, 67, 70, 71, 72, 74, 76,8.5, 87 88, 89, containing about.1,140\t\" St.Michael South, Lets Noe.1,2, 3,\t4, 5, 6.7, and *28, *29, *30, *31, *82, .56, 57, 62, 67, 70, 72, 73.78, *81./.1,074\t\u201c St.Matthew North, all the mining righto in Lot No.40.St.Matthew South.Lot* Nos.*32, 53, 55, 56, 57, 60, 77, ab\u2019t 390\t\" In the Sbionort or Batiscan, Lot Nos.22, South-East *?3, *21.141\t\" In the Township of Bulbtrode.8th Range Lot No.21, containing 200\t\" In the County of Nioolet.To Let, Vf «ï* \u2022ü: That valuable proper tg adjoining the terminus oi the Q, M.O.Si O.Railway at tbe Palais, lately occupied by the Hon.Thos.McGreqvy.There are on the property a Stone Building, 76 feet by 86 feet a Brick Building, 105 feet by 37 feet, and other build ings, well adapted for a manufactory.Possession immediate.Apply to\t___ J.B.RENAUD.June 12, 1882.\tCm p « DTTTIT UTIRÆÎIEj TO PROCURE THE BEST AND CHEAPEST -GO TO- A RELIABLE ESTABLISHMENT, GIVES THE BEST VALUEFOR LEAST MONEY, THEGKEAT TE1WTOT, 22, FABRIQUE STREET.IS UNDER THE PERSONAL MANAGEMENT OF A PROFESSIONAL TEA-TASTER.Having selected some of the finest descriptions of Indian, China and Japan TEAS in the English and American Markets, Now offer to my Customers, and the Public generally, at usual XiO'W IFKIOES- Special attention is requested to tbe following 1 Good Sound (Broken Leaf) Japan, .12c.worth 20c.Good bound Japan, Uncolored,.16c.\t\u201c\t25c.( i ood Sound Japan, do.20c.\t\u201c\t30c.Choice Japan,\tdo.25c.\t\"\t40c.Good Sound Black Tea, (Broken \u201e W).16c.\t\u201c\t25c.Go6a Sound Black Tea.5K)c.\t\u201c\t30c.Choice Black Tea.25c.\t\"\t40c.Hyson Twankay.,.20c.\t\"\t30c.Choice Hj-son Twankay.80c,\t\"\t50c.Extra Choice Hyson.40c.\t**\t60c.Oolong (Formosa) 60c.per !b.Assam.Souchong and Congous.Pekoe, Orange Peko^ Flowery Pekoe.And other Special Varities of Choice TEAS at usual Low Prices, Remember the address,\u2014 GREAT TEA DEPOT, 22, FABRIQUE STREET, A.WATTERS.June 13, 1882.THE GREATEST «CODER OP lODE&S TIMES 1 HOLLOWAY\u2019S PILLS & OINTMENT.purify the Blood, correct all Disease of the UVEI 8T0MA0H, KIDNEYS AND BOWELS They invigorate and restore to health Debilitated Constitutions and are invaluable In all Complaints nef-dental to Female* of all ages.For Children and the aged they are priceless THE OINTMENT s sn infallible remedy for Bad Legs, Bad Breasts, Old Wounds, Sores and Uloers It is famous for Gout and Rheumatism, For disorders of the Chest it has no equal FOR SORE THROATS, BRONCHITIS COUGHS, COLDS, GLANDULAR SWELLINGS, and all Skin Diseases It has no rival Manufaoturei onlv at Pro esso Hollo war\u2019s Establishment, 633, OXFORD STREET, LONDON, and sold at Is.lid., 2s.9d., 4s.6d., 11s 22s , and 33s.each Box and Pot, and In Canada at 36 cento 90 cents, and |1.60 eenta, and the larger sums In proportion.mr CAUTION.\u2014I have no Agent In the United States, nor are my ifedlelnM sold there.Purchasers should therefore look to the Label on the Vote and Boxes.If the address is not 033, Oxford ftreet, endos they are spuHous.The Trade Marks of my said Medicine are registered In Ottawa, and also a Washing on.Signed, THOMAS HOLLOWAY 633, Oxford Street, London.Sept.1,1330.Deoember\tf,m W.W.SHARPE & CO PUBLISHERS' AGENTS No.25, Park Row, New York, Are autborisod to contract for advsttislog in out paper.tarante Company.Fire and Life.GOOD BUILDING LOTS FOR SALE.Houses and Business Stands for Sale or to Let.\u2022-I*\tSt ¦\t.Moderate rents to desir able tenant*.Moderate prices and ea terms of payment to desirable purchasers.A large amount ot Good Storage to Let.Apply to\tJOHN HEARN, 15.Sault-au-Matelot St.June 10, 1882.\tj*nl8-Lm St.Monique, Range St.Joseph, Cadastral No.502, containing 60 In thk County or Dbchmond.Township Simpson, 12th Range, Lots Noe.15, 23, containing.400 All further information about three proper ties can be bad on application to S.J.BENNETT, Agent, 113, St.Peter Street, Quebec.May 22, 1882.\tao-td FOR SALE WILL BE SOLD BY AUCTION, \u2014ON\u2014 Tuesday, ISth October next, cat Qxxc»1ooo, ; T (if not previously disposed of) the whole of the Property at IÆVIS, known as MILL GOVE, and also the following TIMBER LIMITS, FARMS, Ac., belonging to Estate of B.BENNETT A CO.MILL COVE.This valuable Property, Lu the Harbour of Quebec, having a frontage on the River St.Lawrence of two thousand one hundred and sixty feet (2,160), has a first-class Steam Saw Mill, capable of sawing 30,000,000 superficie feet of Lumber in one season.A Grist Mill and a Saw Mill, driven by water, wit Dwelling Houses, Stores, Stables, Ac., Ac., built upon it.( TIMBER LIMITS.The valuable Limits on the Jean dre Terres or U pper Gatineau River, viz.i\u2014 Area, License No.155, Kakabouga Lake, containing 13 miles.No.150, Rapid Lake, 60\t\u201c \u201c\t\"\t157,\tdo.\t50\t\u201c \u201c\t\u201c\t158,\tdo.\t50\t\u201c \u201c\t\"\t159,\tdo.\t43*\t\" M\t\u201c\t160,\tdo.\t42*\t\" \"\t'* 530, Bark Lake, 16 On Lievre River :\u2014 License No.15, containing 50 miles.\"\t\u201c 16, do.46\t\u201c 96 sqr.miles On Rouge River :\u2014 License No.25, containing 60 miles.194 sqr.mile -266 sqr.miles \u201c \u201c 26,\tdo.\t47\tit .\t\u201c\t\u201c 27,\tdo.\t31\ti4 \u201c 28,\tdo.\t42\t«1 M\t\u201c 29,\tdo.\t24\t44 1 On St.Maurice River :\u2014\t\t\t\u2014A License No.13,\tRear St.\t\t \tMaurice,\t25 mile\t \"\t\" 14,\tdo.\t40\t«4 Letter C,\tdo.\tJ2T.\t D.\tdo.\t42\tit K,\tdo.\t50\t04 No.l,|North Rear Flamand, 26\t\" \u201c\t2,\tdo.do.\t50\t\u201c \"\t2,\tSouth Ma- nouan,\t44\t\" ;\t\u2014-302 eqr.miles On Batiscan River License No.\t4,\tNorth,\t50 miles.5,\tdo.\t50 4,\tSouth,\t50 5,\tdo.\t50 6,\tdo.\t50 1,\tSouth River Pierre, 26 2,\tdo.\t50 3,\tdo.\t50 2,\tNorth River Pierre, 46 3,\tdo.\t50 FARMS, -172 sqr.miles 1,329 square milt *¦ Ac.The Rapid Lake Farm, on one of the'Jean des Terres Limits, consisting of one thousand acres (1,000) with Dwelling House, Barns, Stables, Hay Sheds, Workshop, Storehouse Ac., Ac., thereon.Maniwaki, or Desert Village, Property used as a Depot, with Dwelling Houee, Stores, Stables, Aç., Ac., thereon.Northfield Farm, in Townships of Wright and Bouchette, consists of eighteen hundred acres of land, with Dwelling Houses, Stores, Stables, Ac., Ac., thereon.Desalaberry Farm, in Township of Dreala berry, Co.of Argeuteuil, consists of two hundred and eighty-eight and one-ouarter acres of land (288J) with Dwelling Honso.Barns, Stores, Stables, Ac., thereon.Rat River and Grande Anse Farms, en the River\tSt.\tMaurice, with\tDwelling\tHouse, Stores, Stables,\tBarns, Ac.,\tAc., thereon,\tcon- isting of : 806 Acres in Township of Boucher Grande !!\td°*\t°f\tCarignan.1,972\tin\tdo.\tof\tTurcotte.3,837 Acres, AU further information about there properties can be obtained on application to SAM\u2019L.J.BENNETT, Agent, 118, St.Peter Street, Quebec* Ma?;», 1882.\tao-td House to Let, ON 'MAPLE AVENUE,.IN Burroughs\u2019 Block, at present occupied by Revd.R.Kei, and containing 14 Rooms, with Bath, Patent Water Closet, Hot Water Heating Apparatus Ac.Can be seen from 2 to 5 p.m Bent moderate.Aooly to B.LEONARD, 53, St, John Street.February 7,1882.FOR SALE WILL BE SOLD.BY AUCTION, AT the Town of SHERBROOKE, on Wednesday, the 20th September next (if not previously disposed of) the following belonging to Estate of B.BENNETT A CO.Real Estate, viz.: \u2014 In th* Township of Okfobd.8th Range, Lot No.6, containing.200 Acres.9th Range, Lets Noe.1, 2, 3, 4 and 5, containing.944\t\u2018 10th Range, Lota Nos.1, 2, 8, 4 and 5, containing.964\t\u2018 11th Range, Lots Nos.1, 2, 3, 4 and 5, containing.889\t\u2018 12th Range, Loto Nos.1, 8, 4 and North half and South quarter of 5.773\t\u2018 13th Range, Lots Noe.1, 2, 4 and 6.707\t\u2018 -r, [ J*T*f 3 7.¦ .¦ Total.4,437 Half the mineral rights are reserved upon the above lots of land.In thk Township of Bbompton.10th Range, Lot No.28, containing.139 Acres; All further information about these lands can be had on application to SAM\u2019L.J.BENNETT, Agent, 113, St Peter Street, Ouebec.May 22 1882\tao-td CAPITAL, - - £2,000,000 ST» mmenge Reserve Fund.Unlimited Liability to Shareholders» Absolute Security to Assured.Insurances taken at current rate*.Policies issued here.Losses promptly paid.\u2022 t iu *a tt.14 uxtiipd\t\\ 0.P.0HAMH0N, No.66 St Peter St, Quebec.P AT E.N T S CANADIANS can secure patents in the United State* on tame terms as Citizens.It is best to patent first in the States, thus securing 3 17 yews patent : otherwise time will be limited two yeais.Total cost of United States Patent fflO, only $20 on making application, the balance only When patent to allowed.Total cost of Canadian 5 years patent.984 ; for 15 years, 974.On receipt of model or drawing, with description of invention, wt will sand advice, references aod circulars free.A J .$\tn * Afin O.A.SNOW & OO., 8ofi ci tori of Patents, Opposite U.S.Patent Office, Washington, 1) Please mention where you saw this ad vert ia ment July 1, 1882.______mvSOffl N EW MAP -OF THE- Dominion of Canada \u2014 BY \u2014 W.& A.K.JOHNSTON.Blase 80 oc.828.mHESE CELEBRATED MAP PUBLISH X era.have just published a magnificent new Map of the Dominion and Newfoundland, shewing the entire Territory from the Atlantic to tke Pacifie.Tbe most recent Maps and Publications of the Government were kindly placed at Messrs.Johnstsn\u2019s disposal by the Surveyor General at Ottawa, thus enabling them to shew all the newest features of the grçat Nerth-West.Fox' sale.by DAWSON A CO.June 12,1882.\t_____:__ 1882 SEA-BATHING 1882 TADOUSAC\u2014SAGUENAY I The Tadousac Hotel WILL BE OPENED FOR RECEPTION of Hportsmen, Tourists and Families, on and after JUNE 16th.To families and Tourists tbe Hotel off en all tbe comforts of home.To the Rod and G rs Man there is no place on the Bt.Lawreun where he can get more sport, especially tbace Trout Fishing.Telegraph communication direct from the Office.Address, JAMES FENNELL, Lessee and Manager, Tadousac, Q.June 1 1882.\tBm ZE&JôjZhÆ O'VIEIID.THE OFFICE OF THE DAILY IVEHM MSRCDBY HAS BEEN REMOVED TO 74 MOUNTAIN HILL 74 [Mr.Guay\u2019s Cut-Stone Building.] FRINTINO EXECUTED IN ALL ITS BRANCHES.May 20,1882______;____ CHEESE! CHEESE! AUX GOURMETS.The largest assortment of CHEESE ever offered in the markst, as follows :\u2014 Rochefort, Oamembut, Bondent, Haut Canadien, Old English Stilbon Queen\u2019s Arms, American Cheese, Canadia i Cheese, Limburg, Gorgonzella, Menwrt».This last Cheese, \"Menauta,\u201d is for the fin .! time offered lu tbe market.A.TOTJSS-AJEXTO?, - AND - TOUSSAINT & FRERE.January 5.1882.\tdecSO BRÏABT, FOUS A BfiïABT WOOD BROKERS, .LEADENHALL MUSE I Ml Leadenhall Street, Lcndon, England.July -AND\u2014 CIBB\u2019SWHARf rIE TIMBER TOWERS OF OUE&KO haring formed themselves into wa'Amc-dation for tbe'purpose of reoariag a fair remuneration for their Work, and aleo f nlffilyii pore of binding the members to assist daw another, when, in consequence of m seeidtort or tttberwiae, the property eotrartad to tha«harga of any of the Member* of the Aaaociatiou is m danger of being lort, the foCoiring TARIFF OF PRICES has been adopted, which will, in no case, be deviated from:\u2014-Towing Oak from Indian Cove, Cap Rouge and River St Charles, 20 cents per load/CroSs-ing from North hr South Side, 16 cents per load.Between Victoria Gove aad LeWis Town, 12* cento per load.Towing tiquara PinaL Efau, or Ash, haago Oap Ronge, Indian Cove, St Châties Rira-, et Square Pine, El*' and Ash, 101 tween New Liverpool audPatei intermediate places, 12* cento Board Pine, 2 cents extra from Sleepers, same price *e Board J Towing Birch, Walnut Hickory,' : \u2022 ry.Sawed Oak, and Short Aafa^ per load.\t\u2022\t.Towers not responsible, fas Sinking: Timbre if lost through passing ttssmeis or mridén storms.\t* .\t\u201e BOOM TARIFF» Birch, Walnut Hickory, Maple.
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